Conservative - Welfare
Reinstate the two-child benefit cap
Reverse any removal of the two-child limit in Universal Credit and tax credits.
Last updated: May 2026.
Policy baseline
The Conservative page says reinstating the two-child cap would save GBP 3.2bn, with part used for defence. The model assumes Labour has removed or softened the cap in the counterfactual.
- Savings come from lower child-related benefits.
- Low-income larger families bear direct losses.
- Child-poverty effects are the main risk.
Core trade-offs
The Exchequer saves money by restricting support for third and subsequent children. Low-income larger families lose income, and any labour-supply response is uncertain and unlikely to remove poverty costs.
- Taxpayers gain lower benefit spending.
- Larger low-income families lose support.
- Child poverty risk rises.
Fiscal impact by 2028-29
-GBP 3.5bn to -GBP 2.0bn. Central estimate: -GBP 3.2bn.
- Positive numbers mean net fiscal cost; negative numbers mean Exchequer savings.
- Main saving is lower child-related benefit spending.
- Hardship and council support can reduce net savings.
- Savings depend on the baseline.
- This is not an official costing.
Economic impact by 2028-29
- Jobs: Limited employment effect; childcare and health constraints matter more for many parents.
- Wages: No wage effect; household disposable income falls for affected families.
- Prices: No direct price effect expected.
- GDP / productivity: Likely negative for child wellbeing; no clear productivity upside.
Assessment
The cap can save money if the counterfactual is repeal, but it does so by cutting support for children in low-income larger families. The likely distributional and child-poverty costs should be stated plainly.
Confidence: Medium. The saving claim is clear; exact cost depends on the baseline and family caseload forecast.
Main risks
- Child poverty: Income losses are concentrated in larger low-income families with children.
- Weak incentives: Family-size and labour-supply responses are unlikely to offset hardship quickly.
- Spillover costs: Poverty can increase pressure on schools, councils and health services.
Safeguards
- Publish child-poverty impact before implementation.
- Protect kinship care and disability cases.
- Separate defence funding claim from welfare harm.
Academic evidence
Chetty, Journal of Political Economy, 2008
Welfare and job search
Unemployment insurance affects job search through both liquidity support and work incentives.
Shows welfare cuts can raise search pressure but also remove useful income smoothing.
Moral Hazard versus Liquidity and Optimal Unemployment Insurance (2008)
Card, Kluve and Weber, Journal of the European Economic Association, 2018
Active labour market programmes
Training and activation programmes vary widely; impacts are often stronger over medium horizons than immediately.
Relevant where savings rely on moving claimants into sustained work.
What Works? A Meta Analysis of Active Labor Market Program Evaluations (2018)
UK government evidence
Department for Work and Pensions, 2026
Benefit expenditure tables
DWP forecasts UK social-security spending and working-age, disability and housing-cost components.
Anchors welfare-scale assumptions.
Office for Budget Responsibility, 2026
OBR fiscal forecast
The OBR forecast sets the macro, borrowing and receipts baseline used for broad fiscal context.
Prevents treating tax cuts or spending changes as self-financing.
Sources
- PolicyLens methodology: Reinstate the two-child benefit cap Internal - PolicyLens, 2026
- Benefit expenditure and caseload tables UK government statistics - Department for Work and Pensions, 2026
- Economic and fiscal outlook: March 2026 Fiscal forecast - Office for Budget Responsibility, 2026
- Moral Hazard versus Liquidity and Optimal Unemployment Insurance Academic article - Chetty, Journal of Political Economy, 2008
- What Works? A Meta Analysis of Active Labor Market Program Evaluations Academic article - Card, Kluve and Weber, Journal of the European Economic Association, 2018
- Our Plan for Britain Party policy source - Conservative Party, 2026
Other Conservative policies
PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and should not be treated as official costings.