
What is child poverty in the UK?
The Child Poverty Act currently defines children as in poverty if they’re in a household which earns under 60% of the average income. The government is now talking about making it more reflective of a child’s life. Please select ALL you think count as poverty
The Child Poverty Act currently defines children as in poverty if they’re in a household which earns under 60% of the average income. The government is now talking about making it more reflective of a child’s life.
Please select ALL you think count as poverty
Results
| A child sharing a room with someone of different gender | 2,174 votes (22 %) | |
| A child who gets little/no time with parent/guardian | 3,538 votes (35 %) | |
| A child without their own bed | 8,173 votes (81 %) | |
| A home with no central heating | 2,421 votes (24 %) | |
| A home with no heating at all | 8,754 votes (87 %) | |
| A lack of food, shelter or clothing | 9,701 votes (96 %) | |
| Family income below £13,000 a year (60% of median income) | 3,834 votes (38 %) | |
| Family income below £5,000 a year | 7,477 votes (74 %) | |
| Kids that get free school meals | 1,844 votes (18 %) | |
| Kids with fewer than two pairs of shoes | 2,131 votes (21 %) | |
| No access to school trips (though often schools will subsidise) | 2,897 votes (29 %) | |
| No annual holiday | 982 votes (10 %) | |
| No laptop or internet access | 1,057 votes (10 %) | |
| No TV | 1,750 votes (17 %) | |
| Parents can’t afford to save £10+ a month for rainy days/retirement | 3,281 votes (32 %) | |
| Parents regularly behind with paying household bills | 3,435 votes (34 %) | |
| Parents who are drug addicts | 3,948 votes (39 %) |
10,110 people have selected 67,397 options (percentages are the number who voted for that topic of the total people who have voted, so won't add up to 100%).
We try to use technology to limit voting to one per person. Occasionally, this may erroneously block a few people's votes (eg, from shared offices). Apologies for that.
















