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Child poverty falls to 2.3 million - its lowest level since the 1980s according to the government Child poverty falls to 2.3 million - its lowest level since the 1980s according to the government
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The number of children living in relative poverty has fallen to 2.3 million - its its lowest level since the 1980s, according to the government. The number of children living in relative poverty has fallen to 2.3 million - its lowest level since the 1980s, according to the government.
More to follow... The government's current definition of child poverty is whether a child lives in a household with an income of less than 60 per cent of the national average.
The figures, released by the Department for Work and Pensions, said the average household income in 2013/14 before housing costs remained unchanged from the previous year at £453 a week.
The numbers contradict speculation over the past week that the number would rise after the Institute for Fiscal Studies predicted the number living in poverty would significantly rise.
It was widely believed the numbers would increase for the first increase in more than a decade because they are the first statistics that take in the effects of the benefits cap, which was introduced in 2013.
The current measure of poverty was set out in the Child Poverty Act, one of the last pieces of legislation introduced by the last Labour government under Gordon Brown.
It legally commits the Government to reducing child poverty to fewer than one in ten children by 2020.
Frank Field, who served as welfare reform minister under Tony Blair and has been a fierce critic of the government's record on tackling poverty, said a new measurement was needed to take into account poor children's chances of living a better life.
Mr Field, who has been elected as the new chairman of the Work and Pensions select committee, said: "Politicians might understand these measurements but the electorate certainly doesn’t.
"What I hope would interest the electorate is action to prevent poor children becoming poor adults. We must therefore begin talking about, and measuring, poor children’s life chances and how they can be improved.
"It is important that such measurements are accurate, but that they can also safely drive anti-poverty policy."