The Baby Bank Alliance has raised alarm that charities cannot continue to shoulder the impacts of child poverty and need the government to give more support for struggling families.
Pointing to the recent 11% increase in demand, with 400,000 children now having their essential needs met by overwhelmed services, they insist that the government remember that all families in the UK deserve a livable life.
Child poverty and poor housing
Poor housing conditions in London have played a significant role in the support families desperately need, signifying how government policy decisions have a great impact on outcomes for children.
The chair of the Baby Bank Alliance, Sophie Livingstone, told the Guardian:
 We often have families needing us to replace all their children’s clothes because they’ve been rotted by mould.
Heartbreakingly adding:
We never have enough beds. It’s really difficult when we come across a family sleeping on the floor in rodent-infested accommodation.
400,000 UK children supported by baby banks, up 11%.
4.5m children living in poverty.
Low incomes, rising cost of energy, water, housing, essentials drive poverty.
Tories and Reform pledged to reimpose the two-child benefit cap.
What future?https://t.co/WUL0celyNW
— Prem Sikka (@premnsikka) June 23, 2026
Starmer preaches about helping kids, whilst ignoring rising struggle
Starmer resigned as PM on 22 June, and in doing so, praised his record in power as having lifted children out of poverty. However, when you hear from charities on the frontlines of the poverty crisis facing families, his self-gratifying statements just don’t add up.
In fact, this timely piece from the Guardian lays bare just how misleading that statement really is. But that’s hardly surprising. Starmer has repeatedly shown he’s willing to say whatever suits the moment if it helps his image or advances his political ambitions.
Starmer says fewer families are living in poverty thanks to him. Meanwhile, charities helping struggling parents have seen demand rise by 11% in the last year. So much for the Westminster success story.
Whereas the growing pressure on baby banks paints a far more honest picture of life in Britain today – and shows just how out of touch politicians remain with families caught up in this cost of greed crisis.
Save the Children formed the Baby Bank Alliance to advocate for over 400 baby banks which are doing their best to meet the crucial needs of impoverished families. Citing the rise in cost of essential needs such as food, energy, and housing, they call on the government to step up as more and more demand is outstretching available provisions.
A record number are living in poverty affecting the quality of life for 4.5m children. The government u-turned on its 2-child cap which would have worsened these stats, but it is clear this is a mere plaster for a gaping wound which is festering in British society.Â
Sophie Livingstone, who is also chief exec of Little Village, a London-based network of baby banks, told the Guardian:
It’s pretty damning, isn’t it? Families are needing help for systemic reasons, not because there’s a one-off shock to their lives.
Does the UK care about children in poverty?
In fact, even the soon-to-be former PM who preaches about protecting children seems completely in the dark about the rising number of children needing external support to meet their essential needs. Patting himself on the back for improving the lives of children, it begs the question which children he is referring to.
After all, this report from the Baby Bank Alliance underscores how fraudulent his statement truly is.
Much of the struggle reported by families according to the charity are due to poor housing, with many needing to replace clothes due to the mould-infested homes they live in. The housing crisis in the UK has been worsening year on year, with rents pricing families out of suitable accommodation, and a severe lack of social housing which is often in pretty bad condition even if secured.
And let’s not forget private housing. Landlords are charging record rents while too many leave tenants stuck with black mould, damp, and unsafe homes. Families are left forking out a fortune every month only to be treated like an inconvenience when they demand basic living standards.
The Renters’ Rights Bill had the chance to shift the balance back towards renters, but the government weakened it and removed important protections. Once again, tenants are left carrying the burden while those making money from the housing crisis keep counting their profits.
What will the ‘King of the North’ do to help families?
Outside of London, the north west is cited as being a region with the highest number of families in need of support. Given Burnham has long had a foothold politically in the north, many are looking to see what he will do to address this serious and life-changing crisis.
Rev Caroline Hewitt, who set up the Little Lighthouse baby bank, has said that the need has increased since 2019, with families making sure they do not miss their referrals week on week due to the rising cost of baby formula and nappies.
She states that receiving support for these essential baby items often means a family is able to buy more food to support the wider family, which shines a spotlight on how exorbitantly expensive these items have become compared to the cost of food.
Throw in the eye-watering cost of nursery fees, and it’s hardly surprising that more and more parents are being priced out of work and left turning to charities just to put food in a baby’s belly and a clean nappy on their bum.
And the worst part? None of this is inevitable. Families are being squeezed dry while big corporations and the super-rich rake in obscene profits. The pressure crushing parents isn’t some unavoidable fact of life – it’s the result of a neoliberal system that puts the profit of a small few before the many and leaves ordinary families to pick up the bill.
Neoliberal capitalism is destroying the UK
Seeing how capitalism continues to break the backs of families – in work or out of work – proves how futile it is to continue to let the richest in society dictate policy and have free-reign over how much they can exploit consumers.
That exploitation is hurting families across the UK, and every day politicians delay action, the eventual cost of fixing the damage grows. Government intervention will be needed, but unless we finally confront the cost of greed crisis that got us here, we’ll just keep treating the symptoms instead of the cause.
The real drain on society isn’t people on benefits. It’s the super-rich and corporate elites who extract ever greater wealth while working families are squeezed from every angle. They’re quick to point the finger at those struggling to get by, but it’s greed at the top that’s driving so much of the hardship families face today.
Featured image via the Canary







