Observing Receipt of the Scottish Child Payment in Survey Data
Randolph, Hannah and McFadyen, Chirsty and Congreve, Emma (2025) Observing Receipt of the Scottish Child Payment in Survey Data. Fraser of Allander Institute, Glasgow.
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Abstract
The Scottish Child Payment (SCP) is a key benefit for reducing child poverty in Scotland. When SCP was first introduced in 2021, it was underreported compared to administrative data in the survey data used to measure poverty in Scotland (the Family Resources Survey, or FRS). An imputation strategy to replace the suspected missing information was implemented in 2022/23 to better capture households receiving SCP. Several issues were found with the initial imputation; for instance, several households are recorded as receiving SCP for children who were too old to be eligible. Scottish Government analysts have now worked with the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) to develop a new imputation strategy that accounts for these issues in the latest data (2023/24). The new method takes into account the correct age ranges and amount of SCP per week, per child, as well as take-up rates for the benefit. Accurate statistics are particularly important for this period as the 2023/24 data tells us that Scotland has not met its interim child poverty targets. In this report, we retroactively apply the new imputation method to the 2022/23 data to ensure that SCP take-up rates, and therefore poverty statistics, will be comparable between 2022/23 and 2023/24. We conclude that the new imputation method creates small changes in some child poverty measurements for the year 2022/23. However, the main measurement used to discuss child poverty (60% of median equivalised household income after housing costs) is not affected by the change in imputation. The new imputation method is also reasonably consistent in capturing the expected number of children and families receiving SCP and the total cost to the government over the financial year. We conclude that the updated imputation methodology is a marked improvement over the previous method, but that implementing this new method earlier would not have significantly changed our understanding of progress towards the interim child poverty targets. We welcome the new methodology and a commitment from DWP to provides more explanation of the imputation methodology alongside the 2023/24 statistics. We believe these improvements will ensure that people can use the new statistics with confidence. However, there must be a robust and transparent process in place to ensure that any future changes in devolved social security systems are accurately reflected in official poverty statistics.
ORCID iDs
Randolph, Hannah


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Item type: Report ID code: 92765 Dates: DateEvent27 March 2025PublishedSubjects: Social Sciences > Economic Theory Department: Strathclyde Business School > Economics Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 07 May 2025 09:20 Last modified: 07 May 2025 09:20 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/92765