Fraser of Allander child poverty report

Around 1 in 4 children in Scotland live in relative poverty. This means they live in a household with an income 60% below the UK median income after housing costs have been deducted. 

Child poverty can have serious and lifelong impacts across a range of outcomes, and the Scottish Government have stated their aim to reduce significantly the incidence of child poverty. The Child Poverty (Scotland) Act 2017 includes a target to reduce relative child poverty to 10% by 2030/31. The baseline child poverty level is estimated to be 25% in 2020 compared to 24% in the most recent period (2017- 20). 

Meeting the target would represent an unprecedented reduction in child poverty to levels not seen in Scotland certainly since the early 1990s when the current statistical series began. 

The latest Fraser of Allander Institute report into child poverty looks at some of the large, national level, devolved policy levers that the Scottish Government could use to meet the targets. The report focusses on childcare, employability programmes and social security. These are not the only options that the Scottish Government could take forward but are examples of structural policies that are capable of having a significant impact on household incomes and are Scotland wide in their reach. 

By analysing variations of these types of policies, and different combinations, this analysis illustrates the scale of the impact on poverty and the associated costs and benefits of different options. The report envisages that this will be helpful for policymakers and stakeholders who will be focused on developing actions for the next Tackling Child Poverty Delivery plan, due to be published by the Scottish Government by the end of March 2022. The modelling approach developed within this report is one that the FAI researchers hope will be emulated by the Scottish Government to ensure transparency and robustness of the delivery plan. 

The report was made possible due to financial support from abrdn Financial Fairness Trust and has been a collaborative project involving the Fraser of Allander Institute, the Policy Evaluation Research Unit at Manchester Metropolitan University and the Poverty Alliance.