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bpjQK22z
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Resource
Answer
Written answer
answer has question
gJeavfgL
answer has answering person
James Younger
answer text
<p>The Improving Lives publication has shown that workless families are considerably more likely to experience problems with their relationships, have poor mental health, and be in problem debt. The publication includes these figures:</p><p> </p><p>- Children growing up in workless families are almost twice as likely as children in working families to fail at all stages of their education.</p><p>- 37 per cent of children in workless families in England failed to reach the expected level at key stage 1 (aged 7) compared with 19 per cent in lower-income working families.</p><p>- 75 per cent of children in workless families failed to reach the expected level at GCSE, compared to 52 per cent in lower-income working families.</p><p> </p><p>National Statistics on the number of in-work poverty are published annually in the ‘Households Below Average Income’ publication. It is not possible to provide a robust estimate for 2020/21 due to the impact the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic had on data quality in 2020/21.</p><p> </p><p>Statistics for 2021/22 will be published in the next Households Below Average Income publication in March 2023.</p><p> </p><p>The latest available data on in-work poverty shows that in 2019/20, there was only a three per cent chance of children being in poverty (absolute, before housing costs) where both parents worked full-time compared with 42 per cent where one or more parents in a couple was in part-time work.</p>
answer given date
answer has answering body
Department for Work and Pensions
written answer has answering body
Department for Work and Pensions
Department for Work and Pensions
answering body has written answer
bpjQK22z
answering body has answer
bpjQK22z
gJeavfgL
question has answer
bpjQK22z
James Younger
answering person has answer
bpjQK22z