Green - Education
Provide universal school meals
Fund universal free school meals and breakfast clubs for pupils.
Last updated: May 2026.
Policy baseline
Green education pledges include free school meals and breakfast provision. Costs depend on eligibility scope, food inflation and school capacity.
- Targets pupils and parents.
- Universal design reduces stigma but subsidises high-income families.
- Kitchen capacity affects delivery.
Core trade-offs
The direct beneficiaries are children and parents. The costs fall mainly on taxpayers and school catering budgets. The main economic question is universal benefits are less targeted.
- Children and parents gain most directly.
- Costs fall mainly on taxpayers and school catering budgets.
- Key risk: universal benefits are less targeted.
Fiscal impact by 2028-29
+GBP 1.5bn to +GBP 6.0bn. Central estimate: +GBP 2.8bn.
- Positive numbers mean net fiscal cost; negative numbers mean Exchequer savings.
- Main channel is the scored tax, spending or delivery change.
- Offsets depend on tax receipts, behaviour and pass-through.
- Range reflects uncertain implementation and economic response.
- This is not an official costing.
Economic impact by 2028-29
- Jobs: Education hiring rises; shortages and retention problems may cap delivery.
- Wages: Teachers, childcare staff or students gain; taxpayers fund the cost.
- Prices: Childcare prices may fall if supply expands; wage pressure can offset subsidies.
- GDP / productivity: Long-run gains possible; short-run GDP effects depend on staffing and quality.
Assessment
This is a real trade-off, not a free gain. Children and parents benefit, while taxpayers and school catering budgets bear most costs. Overall output depends on behaviour, capacity and pass-through.
Confidence: Medium-low. Higher on the policy target and fiscal channel; lower on behaviour, pass-through and economy-wide effects.
Main risks
- Staffing shortage: Recruitment and retention can limit delivery.
- Quality variation: Extra places or grants do not guarantee high-quality provision.
- Long payback: Economic returns take years and are hard to score fiscally.
Safeguards
- Target shortages and disadvantaged pupils.
- Audit quality and staff retention.
- Evaluate outcomes before expansion.
Academic evidence
Belot and James, Journal of Health Economics, 2011
School meals evidence
Healthy school meals improved educational outcomes and absenteeism in a UK setting.
Relevant to meal and breakfast policies.
Holford and Rabe, Institute for Social and Economic Research, 2022
Universal school meals
Universal infant free school meals improved take-up and some educational outcomes.
Relevant to universal meals and breakfast provision.
UK government evidence
Green Party of England and Wales, 2024
Green manifesto
The manifesto defines the tax, spending, climate, housing and public-service proposals modelled here.
Used to define the scenario, not as an official costing.
Department for Education, 2025
School funding statistics
DfE statistics provide the school-spending baseline and pupil-funding context.
Used to scale new education spending.
HM Treasury, 2025
Spending Review baseline
Departmental baselines affect whether stated school funding is additional.
Supports the fiscal counterfactual.
Sources
- PolicyLens illustrative scenario methodology for provide universal school meals Internal - PolicyLens, 2026
- Healthy School Meals and Educational Outcomes Academic article - Belot and James, Journal of Health Economics, 2011
- Green Party manifesto: a reaction Think tank analysis - Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2024
- Green Party manifesto summary Manifesto summary - Local Government Association, 2024
- Universal Infant Free School Meals Academic working paper - Holford and Rabe, Institute for Social and Economic Research, 2022
- School funding statistics Official statistics - Department for Education, 2025
- Spending Review 2025 UK government spending review - HM Treasury, 2025
- Manifesto for a Fairer, Greener Country Party policy source - Green Party of England and Wales, 2024
Other Green policies
PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and should not be treated as official costings.