14 Deferred

Publish findings on sufficiency of household support to prevent regular food aid use

Recommendation
Higher food inflation and the rise in the cost of living more generally is meaning that food banks are experiencing record levels of demand this year. Earned income, not food banks, are ultimately the solution for household food insecurity. We welcome the substantial support packages, including the index-linked rise in welfare benefits and pensions, that the Government have provided to households which help them to meet their increased bills and therefore have more money to spend on food than 252 Food Standards Agency (FSA) (FS0082) 48 Food Security otherwise. The Government should examine whether the totality of support to lower- income households, including from central and local Government and charities, is sufficient to ensure household food security without the need to regularly use food aid organisations and publish its findings within six months of the publication of this Report.
Government Response Summary
The government stated it would not introduce new taxes that could increase food costs and affirmed that food affordability and access are key elements of its poverty strategy, but it did not commit to examining the sufficiency of existing support to reduce reliance on food aid or publishing findings within six months.
Paragraph Reference
63
Government Response
Deferred
HM Government Deferred
The Government does not consider that now is the right time to introduce new taxes that will push up the cost of food. The affordability of food, and individuals’ access to food, is a key element of the Government’s approach to tackling poverty as we manage the impact of cost- of-living pressures.
Timeline
Recommendation age 2.8 yrs
Report published 28 Jul 2023