Child poverty in working households has increased by over 1,300 a week, on average, since 2010 – according to new TUC analysis published today.

The analysis shows that the number of kids living in poverty with at least one parent in work increased by 900,000 (44%) between 2010 and 2023 – the equivalent to 1,350 a week.

The TUC says in 2023 there were 3 million kids in working households living below the breadline in the UK.

The report says says that a “toxic combination” of wage stagnation, rising insecure work and cuts to social security have had a “devastating impact” on family budgets.

Real wages are still worth less today than in 2008 and the union body estimates that had they grown at their pre-crisis trend since the Tories took power the average worker would be over £14,000 a year better off.

And separate analysis from the TUC shows that the number of people in insecure work, low-paid work has increased by nearly 1 million during the Conservatives’ time in office to a record 4.1 million.

TUC General Secretary Paul Nowak said:
“No child in Britain should be growing up below the breadline.

“But under the Conservatives we have seen a huge in rise in working families being pushed into poverty.

“A toxic combination of pay stagnation, rising insecure work and cuts to social security have had a devastating impact on family budgets.

“We urgently need an economic reset and a government that will make work pay. Reducing child poverty must be a priority in the years ahead.”

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