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Scrap two-child benefit cap to help lift 4m people out of poverty, government urged

1 day ago
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A cross-party commission including former welfare ministers is urging the government to scrap the two-child benefit limit as part of an ambitious “once in a generation” plan to lift millions of people out of poverty.The Poverty Strategy Commission said billions of pounds of investment – including a boost to the rate of universal credit – was needed to reverse record levels of poverty in the UK, and tackle longstanding failures over rising hardship and destitution.The commission report represents a challenge to the government as it prepares to announce its own child poverty reduction strategy, amid concerns Treasury-imposed constraints will water down any changes that push up benefit spending.The commission said its wide-ranging proposals would lift 4.2 million people out of poverty, including 2.

2 million people stranded in “deep poverty” – defined as household income at least 50% below the official poverty line and equivalent to £11,013 a year for a single parent with two children.Labour ministers such as the welfare minister, Sir Stephen Timms, the energy minister, Miatta Fahnbulleh, and policy adviser Graeme Cooke were key members of the commission before joining the government.The prisons minister, Lord Timpson, is a commission adviser.The independent commission was launched three years ago with the ambition of creating a cross-party consensus on tackling rising hardship.Its findings offer an authoritative mainstream policy blueprint for tackling what it has called the “societal failure” to tackle poverty.

The commission said abolishing the two-child benefit limit, which denies £3,500 a year in welfare payments to third and subsequent children born to families on universal credit since 2017, was central to reducing poverty and increasing the life chances of the poorest youngsters.The government has resisted scrapping the two-child limit on cost grounds – estimated at £3bn a year – despite widespread opposition from Labour backbenchers, and anti-poverty campaigners.The latest figures show 1.7 million children live in households affected by the policy.The commission says removing the two-child limit would be part of a revamped “basic minimum” social security safety net costing an extra £12.

5bn a year.Under a new “social contract”, the state would guarantee protection from deep poverty to any citizen on benefits who meets agreed expectations to find work, work more hours and get higher paid jobs.The commission’s final report, expected to be published on Thursday, is critical of the government’s attempt this year to cut £5bn from disability benefits.It said the now-abandoned plans, which would have pushed 250,000 disabled people into poverty, indicated “a failure to grasp the challenge [of poverty reduction] effectively”.The commission estimates nearly a quarter of the UK population, including 36% of children, are in poverty.

Its says its proposals, which include investment in housing and childcare, will lead to a “never-before-seen reduction in the scale and nature of poverty”,Its membership includes figures from the political right, including Philippa Stroud, a Tory peer and former adviser to Iain Duncan Smith; and the former Tory welfare secretary Stephen Crabb,David Laws, a Liberal Democrat schools minister in the 2010-2015 coalition government, is also a member,Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotionStroud said the government’s proposed disability benefit changes failed because ministers “did not have a story to tell” about why they were doing them,“If you have not got a narrative on poverty then you run into the kinds of problems they [ministers] did on disability benefit cuts,” she said.

The commission did not publish cost estimates of its plans although its interim report in 2023 put the figure at £36bn a year.The commission says fiscal constraints are not an excuse for failing to tackle poverty, and over time investment in doing so would drive higher economic growth and productivity.Helen Barnard, a commission member and director of policy at the food bank charity Trussell, said: “We are seeing more people trapped in severe and sustained poverty, turning to food banks because they have nowhere else to go.This hardship damages individuals, families, communities and the UK’s economy and public services.”A government spokesperson said: “This government is determined to drive down poverty and ensure that every child gets the best start in life.

We are overhauling jobcentres and reforming the broken welfare system to support people into good, secure jobs, while always protecting those who need it most.“In addition to extending free school meals and ensuring the poorest children don’t go hungry in the holidays through a new £1bn crisis support package, our child poverty taskforce will publish an ambitious strategy to tackle the structural and root causes of child poverty across the country.”
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Fast fashion’s quick decline: Asos and Boohoo have that post-Covid feeling

Once the feared enemy of the high street and worth more than £5bn, the online fashion retailer Asos has seen its value slump as it faces difficulties that could herald the demise of fast fashion.The London-based seller dropped out of the FTSE 250 with a whimper this week, valued at about £320m.Four years ago Asos, and its fellow online fast fashion purveyor Boohoo, were booming as the high street suffered from Covid pandemic lockdowns, and largely housebound shoppers had cash to spare for slouchy leisurewear.They thought shoppers had been permanently converted to online shopping, and stocked up accordingly, only for Asos to find itself lumbered with a £1bn stock hangover as, post-pandemic, young and old alike once again enjoyed the freedom to try on clothes and stalk the high street.By the end of 2021 Nick Beighton resigned as chief executive with profits headed downwards – and the new boss, José Antonio Ramos Calamonte, has yet to stem the decline

about 12 hours ago
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Retail sales rise but ONS apologises as statistics crisis deepens

Sunny weather and the Euro 2025 women’s football tournament helped boost retail sales in July, according to delayed official figures that have been blighted by errors.The Office for National Statistics (ONS) apologised for the mistakes and delay in releasing the retail sales figures for Great Britain, which were published two weeks later than planned.The UK statistics agency made another error on Friday morning, issuing a link to the wrong blog by a senior executive explaining that the ONS needs to improve its performance.The ONS said retail sales volumes grew 0.6% month on month in July because of a combination of factors, including good weather and sales of clothing and merchandise related to the Lionesses’ winning run

about 12 hours ago
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US justice department opens criminal inquiry into Fed governor Lisa Cook

The US justice department has initiated a criminal investigation into mortgage fraud claims against the Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook as a lawsuit she filed against Donald Trump over her firing makes its way through court.Lawyers with the justice department have issued subpoenas for the investigation, according to the Wall Street Journal, which first reported the investigation, which has since been confirmed by multiple news publications.Last month, Trump moved to fire Cook over unconfirmed claims that she listed two properties as her primary residence. Bill Pulte, the director of the Federal Housing and Finance Agency and a close ally of Trump, alleged Cook had lied on bank documents and records to obtain a better mortgage rate.Cook, a voting member of the Fed board that sets interest rates, said she had “no intention of being bullied to step down” and that she would “take any questions about my financial history seriously”

about 20 hours ago
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BrewDog posts £37m loss as sales growth slows to just 1%

BrewDog lost nearly £37m last year as sales growth ground to a virtual halt, capping a rocky period in the wake of its outspoken founder James Watt’s departure as chief executive.In the past few months, the self-styled “punk” beer company’s drinks have been axed from 2,000 pubs as customers opted for rival brews. It has also shut 10 of its own bars, citing tough trading conditions. Watt’s co-founder, Martin Dickie, announced his own departure last month.On Thursday afternoon, BrewDog’s shareholders – who it calls “punks” – received an update outlining the company’s financial position

1 day ago
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UK businesses cut jobs at fastest pace in four years over summer, Bank of England finds

UK businesses cut jobs at the fastest pace in four years over the summer, according to a Bank of England survey highlighting the impact from tax rises on employers.The monthly snapshot from a survey of chief financial officers at British businesses of all sizes showed firms reduced employment by an annual rate of 0.5% in the three months to August, the fastest since 2021.There was also a marked decline from the previous month in firms’ employment intentions for the coming year. Expectations for jobs growth weakened by 0

1 day ago
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Simple solution to Sainsbury’s shoplifting | Brief letters

There is a far better way for Sainsbury’s to cut shoplifting than using facial recognition tech (Report, 2 September). It is simply to employ more staff to serve at the checkouts rather than increasing the use of self-service terminals. Last time we went to the Sainsbury’s Whitechapel store, there were no staffed checkouts at all and no floor manager to complain to, just self-service tills and one harassed member of staff trying to keep an eye on things. Mary Pimm and Nik WoodLondon Regarding Zoe Williams’ dealings at her local tip (2 September), if the recycling centre isn’t interested in old but working computers or monitors, how about asking your local school? Our local primary was happy to take my old but fully working Apple iMac and Mac mini. Ken Scott South Milford, North Yorkshire Manchester may have had “Corporation Pop” (Letters, 1 September), but in Birmingham we had “Corporation Brylcreem”

1 day ago
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Revisions and rising unemployment: what to know about the US jobs report

about 2 hours ago
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US labor market ‘has headed off a cliff-edge’ with just 22,000 jobs added in August – as it happened

about 4 hours ago
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Tesla offers Elon Musk a trillion-dollar pay package

about 6 hours ago
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Trump hosts US tech leaders at White House dinner – minus Elon Musk

about 19 hours ago
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US Open tennis 2025: Novak Djokovic v Carlos Alcaraz, men’s semi-final – live

about 1 hour ago
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Inclusive Brighton is perfect venue for World Cup’s sell-out party weekend

about 2 hours ago