The government will fail to meet its child poverty reduction targets by 2020, according to a new report.
Alan Milburn, chairman of the social mobility and child poverty commission, said it was "inconceivable" that the targets would be met.
It meant that the UK was at risk of being "permanently divided" with the poorest left behind, the report warns.
Mr Milburn also accused the three largest political parties of being "less than frank" on the issue.
The second annual State of the Nation report claims the policies promised by the three largest Westminster parties will not succeed in reducing child poverty by half by 2020.
'Unholy mess'Mr Milburn, a former Labour minister, said the current government had "discredited existing child poverty targets and failed to put in place new ones", creating an "unholy mess".
The existing targets were put in place in 2010 by the last Labour government.
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Alan Milburn: "It does seem that Britain is on the brink of becoming a permanently divided nation"
According to the commission's report "absolute child poverty increased by 300,000 between 2010-11 and 2012-13" and "independent experts expect child poverty to increase significantly over the next few years". It also says that "working poverty after housing costs is rising".
It says 1.4 million children are now in "relative poverty" due to the effects of rising rents and mortgage costs since 2010, despite the rate of relative poverty in the general population falling to its lowest level since 1984.
The report also says that 20% of Scottish children and 24% of Welsh children live in absolute poverty.
It also offers a series of recommendations that - if implemented by 2020 - would "prevent Britain becoming a permanently divided society and ensure there is a social recovery alongside the economic recovery".
The recommendations include:
- Reform child poverty targets
- 'Working poor' exempted from austerity measures
- Higher pay for the best teachers to go to the most challenging schools
- All children to be school-ready at age five by 2025
- National parenting campaign to be launched
- Illiteracy and innumeracy ended for primary-school leavers by 2025
- Long-term youth unemployment ended by 2020
- Britain to become a Living Wage country by 2025
- Number of housing options increased
- Unpaid internships ended by 2020
- Cap on student numbers at individual universities to be removed
Mr Milburn told BBC Breakfast the risk is that young people today "simply do not have the opportunity to progress".
And speaking to BBC Radio 4's Today programme, he also said that what was needed in government was a "more rounded sense of what makes people poor".
He added: "What every political party needs to do is reconcile very good social ends and fiscal and other policies they want to pursue.
"It is no good willing the ends and not willing the means."
It proposes that the UK government give the Office for Budget Responsibility "a new role to report on the poverty and social mobility impacts of budgets", as well as advocating that "all political parties come forward with a clear set of plans before the election next year for what they will cut and how they will avoid negative impacts on social mobility and child poverty".
Prominent in the areas considered by the commission is the question of housing - the report says 20.8% of families with children are now renting private accommodation, up from 5.7% in 1988.
The commission recommends combating the "poverty premium", which "forces the poorest families to pay the highest prices for life's essentials", by extending the Warm Homes Discount (which gives a discount on energy bills to some low-income families with children) and the Green Deal (which provides loans to households for to insulate their property and cut heating costs).
It says the government should work with other suppliers to "standardise access to discounts".
Mr Milburn said the aim of government policies should be to get people "from welfare to work and then from low-pay to living-pay".
'Plainly absurd'
The commission says the next government's goal should be to end youth unemployment by 2020. It argues a 'Day One' re-engagement service for those who enter the job market for the first time or lose a job should be introduced, and by 2020 half of all employers with more than ten employees should be offering apprenticeships.
The report also claims five million people currently earn less than a living wage.
He said that Labour's promise to raise the minimum wage to £8 an hour by 2020 was a "good step forward", but "not as ambitious as one would hope it would be", adding that if the "historic trend" in minimum wage rises had continued since 2008, the rate would be £8.23 an hour by 2020.
But Ian Murray, Labour's shadow minister for trade and investment, said: "Labour's pledge to raise the National Minimum Wage to £8 in 2019 is good news for millions of people across the country. To suggest otherwise is plainly absurd. We are the party that introduced the minimum wage and Labour is the only major party with a plan to strengthen it further."
Mr Milburn also criticised Chancellor George Osborne for promising to freeze working-age benefits for 2 years, saying this would have a negative impact on the "working poor".
Matthew Reed, chief executive of the Children's Society, said that a failure to end child poverty by 2020 would be a "national disgrace" that reflected "repeated failures by successive governments to back up words with action.
And Barnardo's Javed Khan said: "It's shocking that poverty looms for a record number of children by 2020, no matter how hard their families work. Surely now it's time for the UK Government to change its 'slash and burn' approach to welfare reform."
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