MORE than 4,000 children on the Isle of Wight were living in poverty just before the coronavirus pandemic hit, figures reveal.

Experts predict this figure will rise even further due to the pandemic, and charities are urging the Government to take action to prevent more families from falling into hardship when the crisis ends.

The majority of children in poverty (78 per cent) were in working households.

On the Isle of Wight, 4,270 children aged under 16 were living in families with low incomes in 2019-20, Department for Work and Pensions data shows.

This is an estimated 19 per cent of all youngsters in the area.

That was down from 20 per cent the year before, but above the ​15 per cent seen in 2014-15, when comparable records began.

A family is defined as in low income if it earns less than 60 per cent of the national median household income before housing costs are considered.

Families are included in the figures if they have claimed child benefit alongside another means of support, such as Universal Credit, tax credits or housing benefit, at some point in the year.

Of the children in poverty on the Isle of Wight last year, 1,155 (27 per cent) were below school age.

The majority of children (78 per cent) were in working households, while 37 per cent were in lone-parent families.

They were among 235,900 under-16s in poverty across the South East as a whole last year.

Imran Hussain, director of policy and campaigns at charity Action for Children, said: "The Government is in denial over child poverty which continues to rise and threatens to torpedo its flagship plans for levelling up.

"Experts have warned that child poverty will rise even further after the pandemic, with working families facing a double threat this coming winter to their living standards as unemployment peaks and Universal Credit is cut.

"Three-quarters of children in poverty live in working families."

The Child Poverty Action Group, which is calling for a boost to benefit payments, said the "dismal" figures show leaders need to take urgent action.

Chief executive Alison Garnham said: "Increasing child benefit by £10 per week would lift 450,000 children from poverty.

"One year from now we should not have to look at data showing even more children have fallen into poverty because of government inaction.

"We badly need a cross-government strategy to end child poverty and increasing child benefit should be the first action point."

Work and pensions secretary Thérèse Coffey said average household incomes saw their strongest annual growth for nearly 20 years in 2019-20, meaning families went into the pandemic on a "firm financial footing".

"We have since increased our support with an unprecedented package of measures targeting those with the lowest incomes to help families through a difficult year," she added.

"Our relentless focus as we build back better is on getting Britain back on its feet through our multi-billion-pound Plan For Jobs."