Working people using foodbanks is a sign that employment is not lifting people out of poverty in a way you would hope in a just society, the Archbishop of Canterbury has said.

Justin Welby said the majority of visitors to foodbanks were in work, as he reiterated his calls for more to be done to tackle poverty.

READ MORE: Desperately-needed Glasgow foodbank facing closure as demand for vital service soars

There has been growing concern around so-called in-work poverty, with research suggesting more than five million working people in the UK are earning below the real living wage.

Asked about the economy, the Archbishop told ITV's Peston on Sunday: "It's obviously producing very good jobs, there's a lot of jobs at the moment, there's low unemployment, there's good news.

READ MORE: City foodbank desperate for donations of female sanitary items

"But the thing we see, with all the other churches together, is that at our foodbanks now the majority of people who come to the foodbanks are in work.

"That is a sign that work is not lifting people out of poverty in the way that we would hope in a society that is just."

He went on to call for investment in areas such as skills and apprenticeships.

READ MORE: Dozens of Glasgow kids have summer club thanks to Evening Times donation

The Archbishop said he did not understand why fundamentalist Christians in the US supported Donald Trump, as he called the US president's attitude towards women "completely unacceptable".

Mr Welby said he would attend a state dinner with Donald Trump in the UK, adding: "I've spent years and years involved in conflict stuff around the world where I met people who had killed many, many people.

"Part of the job is to meet people you disagree with and to testify of the love of Christ to them and to seek to draw them into a different way.

"The odds are, it would be unlikely I'd do more than shake hands with him."