"Struggling families need a stronger child poverty plan not a review of targets" say campaigners as Cabinet Secretary delivers progress report
Child poverty campaigners have responded to today's (18th June) Scottish Government Tackling Child Poverty Delivery Plan - Annual Progress Report and her announcement of a review of child poverty targets.
John Dickie, Director of the Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) in Scotland, said
"Very real progress has been made on child poverty in Scotland recently, but the Cabinet Secretary's focus today on reviewing targets rather than strengthening her child poverty plan is hugely concerning. Struggling families need a stronger plan, not a review of targets.
It is vital that Ministers come forward with a revised child poverty plan. The current plan rightly focusses on boosting income from employment and social security and cutting the costs families face, but the scale and detail of action falls far short of what's needed. A revised plan must demonstrably set out how further year-on-year progress will be made. For the one in five of Scotland's children still locked in poverty there is no time to lose."
Mr. Dickie continued;
"Plans to increase the Scottish child payment for babies under one are a positive step but they won't kick in for over a year and will still leave the vast majority of children without any additional financial support. The promise of more breakfast clubs, after school and holiday activities and further childcare expansion will all be welcomed by families, but don't yet add up to the scale of intervention needed to make serious further progress."
The Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) in Scotland sent a proposed Programme for Government to every member of the Scottish Parliament ahead of todays Ministerial Statement. The groups proposal include;
- Extending the planned increase to Scottish child payment for babies (to £40 a week) to all eligible children, as a step toward doubling its value to at least £55 per week by 2030.
- Commencing outstanding provisions of the Social Security (Amendment) (Scotland) Act 2025 to enable gaps in Scottish child payment entitlement to be addressed, and to ensure the payment provides greater security for families whose earnings from work fluctuate by, for example, introducing a 12-week 'run on'.
- Ensuring high-quality school aged childcare is available to all parents during term time and school holidays.
- Subsidising providers to deliver short periods of free childcare to help families when support for childcare costs from universal credit is not available
- Using public procurement and public body wage setting powers to drive improvements in the quality of work.
- Investing in the provision of affordable social housing, to ensure all children live in safe, secure and affordable homes; and
- Funding every school to fully remove cost pressures from families, and overcome poverty-related barriers to learning through expansion of free school meals, extension of school clothing grants, provision of devices and connectivity, and funding access to ‘rite of passage’ residentials and school trips.
Mr Dickie continued;
"There is no question that budget pressures and long-term fiscal sustainability pose a real challenge for the Scottish government. That is why it is more important than ever to reduce the long-term costs that poverty imposes on our public services and economy. Each and every public sector reform and tax and spending decision must be designed to contribute to child poverty reduction"
ENDS
For more background or interviews contact John Dickie Director of CPAG in Scotland on 07795 340 618 .
Notes:
- The Scottish Government's Tackling Child Poverty Delivery Plan - Annual Progress Report, is required by the Child Poverty (Scotland) Act 2017.
- The latest single year figure (used to measure progress against legally-binding child poverty targets) suggests that the statutory interim child poverty target to reduce child poverty to less that 18% by 2023/24 was met. We are treating this with real caution though, given the variability of single year figures and especially as the rate jumped back to 21% in 2024/25. By looking at the time series of revised three-year figures, also published by the UK government as accredited statistics, we can see that child poverty has fallen in Scotland (and not just as a result of the way the figures have been produced).
- CPAG in Scotland's proposed 'Programme for Government 2026-31'
- The number of children in poverty in Scotland fell from 25% between 2020-2023 to 21% in 2022 to 2025. Across the UK as a whole 28% of children were still living in poverty across the same period. See: Department of Work and Pensions Households Below Average Income (HBAI) statistics, March 2026 Data Table 4.16ts
- An analysis of the long term cost of child poverty to publics services and Scotland's economy can be found at IPPR Tipping the Scales, the social and economic harm of poverty in Scotland, May 2023.