UK Parliament / Open data

Children: Poverty

Written question asked by Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi (Labour) on Thursday, 12 December 2024, in the House of Commons. It was due for an answer on Friday, 6 December 2024. It was answered by Stephen Morgan (Labour) on Thursday, 12 December 2024 on behalf of the Department for Education.

Question

To ask the Secretary of State for Education, how many children living in relative poverty are not eligible for free school meals.

Answer

The new government has a central mission to break down barriers to opportunity for every child.

The government has inherited a trend of rising child poverty and widening attainment gaps between children eligible for free school meals (FSM) and their peers. Child poverty has increased by 700,000 since 2010, with over four million children now growing up in a low-income family. The government is committed to delivering an ambitious strategy to reduce child poverty by tackling the root causes and giving every child the best start at life. To support this, a new ministerial taskforce has been set up to develop a Child Poverty Strategy, which will be published in spring 2025. The taskforce will consider a range of policies in assessing what will have the greatest impact in driving down rates of child poverty.

A formal assessment has not been made of the number of children living in relative poverty who are eligible to receive FSM. As with all policies, the government keeps the approach to FSM under review.

Type
Written question
Reference
17862
Session
2024-25
Contains statistics
Yes
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