Labour has pledged to eliminate child poverty "within a generation" and reduce it by 25% by 2005. Despite some success, recent figures suggest they might fall short of that target. Poverty rates have come down more slowly for pensioners, and not at all for working age adults. Critics say the complexity of child benefits has discouraged people from taking them up. And they argue that it has been jobs, not benefits, that boosted the income of poor families with children.
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