Keir Starmer’s Labour government has been warned that its tough stance on benefits risks costing the UK economy more than £38 billion a year while pushing more people into poverty and increasing pressure on public services.
The anti-poverty charity the Trussell Trust said that, despite Labour’s repeated promises of no return to austerity, attempts to curb welfare spending could have severe economic and human consequences. In a report commissioned from WPI Economics, the charity argued that Britain’s elevated poverty levels are already sapping potential output and damaging the nation’s finances.
The intervention comes as the government prepares to publish its child poverty strategy in June, amid growing unrest among Labour MPs over the £5 billion in benefit cuts announced by Chancellor Rachel Reeves in her spring statement. Ministers are reportedly ruling out scrapping the controversial two-child benefit limit introduced by the Conservatives, a policy campaigners warn could drive child poverty to record highs.
The Trussell Trust’s report highlights that as many as 9.3 million people, including 3 million children, faced hunger and hardship in the financial year ending March 2023. Defined as living more than 25 per cent below the poverty line set by the Social Metrics Commission, these households struggle with day-to-day essentials.
The economic toll is significant. Lower employment rates and weakened productivity among people in deep poverty mean the UK economy is missing out on £38.2 billion in annual output. This, in turn, deprives the Treasury of £18.4 billion in tax revenues and forces £5.3 billion of extra spending on social security support. Additional demands on services such as the NHS, social care and education are estimated to cost the exchequer another £13.7 billion annually.
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