Logo

 

Banner Image:   National-News-banner-Purple
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet

Government's New Child Poverty Measure 'fatally flawed', say Churches 


Four major British Churches have criticised the Government's proposals for a new way of measuring child poverty in the UK

 
The Baptist Union of Great Britain, Church of Scotland, Methodist Church and United Reformed Church have accused the Government's consultation on the proposals of being 'confused' and 'surprisingly badly evidenced'.

The proposed new 'multi-dimensional' poverty measure, aims to take a variety of measures that the Government believes are linked with poverty and use these to create a single number to represent UK child poverty. Surprisingly, most of the measures combined in the proposals are more commonly found in those living outside of poverty than those inside.

Particularly concerning is the fact that, despite the majority of families in poverty coming from working families, the Government wants to focus on worklessness as a measure of poverty.

'Excluding or diminishing the experience of low-paid families from any future measure of poverty would be a serious failing,' added Stephen Keyworth, Faith and Society team leader for the Baptist Union of Great Britain.

'Such people work tough jobs, often with unsocial hours. We agree that is vital to measure things such as unemployment and disability.
'These things can help us understand British society and the place of poverty within it. However, these factors combined make for a very bad measure of child poverty. Only robust, well-evidenced indicators of poverty should be used to measure child poverty.'

'Child poverty is an unacceptable injustice,' said Paul Morrison, Public Issues Policy Adviser for the Methodist Church. 'While we applaud the Government's commitment to eradicating child poverty in the UK, the proposed new measure is fatally flawed.

'It is a confusion of targets, measures and, most disturbingly, the Government's beliefs about what causes poverty, backed by very little solid evidence.'
Next month the four Churches are due to publish a major report entitled The Lies We Tell Ourselves: Ending Comfortable Myths About Poverty. The report will confront some of the common myths that people believe about those on benefits in the UK.

'Poverty is not just an issue facing the poor - it's a societal problem and one that shames us all,' added Marie Trubic, United Reformed Church spokesperson on public issues.

'As Christians we believe that we all have a duty to take responsibility for the injustices that have become embedded in the society we have built.
'We should not simply accept the status quo and blame the poor for their circumstances. Instead, we must find new ways to build a fairer future for all.'

 

    Post     Tweet
Shine Your Light saw ‘significant year-on-year growth’
The national evangelistic Christmas initiative mobilised and reached record numbers of people in 2025, organisers have stated
Baptist Union Presidency for Mark Elder
Baptists have discerned that Mark Elder, minister of Tarporley Chapel in Cheshire, will serve as Baptist Union President in 2027-28. His theme is Word and Spirit
More than a thousand Christians march against Christian nationalism
The group was part of a wider event, called The Together March, which had more than 200 civil society organisations taking part in central London
Baptist Union Council: March 2026
The latest phase of the Financial Model Review was shared at Baptist Union Council, with members voting to approve a new funding approach for 2027-8, and further investigation of options beyond
Simeon Baker appointed as General Secretary of the Baptist Union of Wales
The Revd Simeon Baker has been appointed as the new General Secretary of the Baptist Union of Wales, succeeding the Revd Judith Morris
Quiet Revival report withdrawn
Bible Society has withdrawn its Quiet Revival report after discovering the YouGov survey it was based on was faulty
     Latest News 
    Posted: 27/03/2026
    Posted: 25/11/2025
    Posted: 29/07/2025
    Posted: 04/06/2025
    Posted: 21/05/2025
     
    Text Size:  
    Small (Default)
    Medium
    Large
    Contrast:  
    Normal
    High Contrast