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Anti-poverty study’s findings pile pressure on ministers to retain £20 Universal Credit Covid uplift
Last April, Universal Credit was increased as a temporary measure. Photograph: Martin Lee/Alamy
Last April, Universal Credit was increased as a temporary measure. Photograph: Martin Lee/Alamy
Tue 13 Jul 2021 19.01 EDT
Last modified on Tue 13 Jul 2021 19.03 EDT
The £20-a-week cut to universal credit in October will leave out-of-work families with children barely half the income needed to achieve a socially-acceptable basic standard of living, according to new research.
Many working families will also struggle to reach minimum income standards, it found, with a single parent in full-time work on the national living wage left £46 short each week – growing to £66 when the £20 universal credit uplift is removed.

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