Labour advised advantages ‘not a lifestyle choice’ as Reeves refuses to rule out PIP lower | EUROtoday

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Ministers have been warned towards welfare adjustments that may see folks stripped of their profit entitlements and pushed into poverty forward of Labour’s crunch Spring Statement.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves might be revealing the celebration’s plans on 26 March, with pencilled-in cuts to the advantages invoice thought to have risen to as a lot as £5 billion. This will come alongside a Green Paper from the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) outlining the proposals.

It’s understood the adjustments will focus largely on well being and incapacity advantages, as authorities spending rose to £65bn final 12 months – up 25 per cent from the 12 months earlier than the Covid pandemic – and is forecast to rise to £100bn earlier than the subsequent election.

DWP secretary Liz Kendall mentioned on Thursday: “We inherited a broken welfare system that is failing sick and disabled people, is bad for the taxpayer, and holding the economy back.

“For too long, sick and disabled people have been told they can’t work, denied support, and locked out of jobs, with all the benefits that good work brings.”

Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall (Jacob King/PA)

Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall (Jacob King/PA) (PA Wire)

But forward of the fiscal occasion, specialists have warned the chancellor that adjustments should not hit the residing requirements of disabled folks, who already face among the highest ranges of hardship of any group.

Analysis by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF) has discovered that half of the individuals who obtain the health-related aspect of Universal Credit are struggling to pay for the necessities, in comparison with 11 per cent of households not receiving any advantages.

Meanwhile, nearly 1 / 4 (24 per cent) of working-age adults in a household in a household receiving health-related UC had to make use of a foodbank within the final 12 months, in comparison with three per cent of the overall inhabitants.

The charity provides that 30 per cent of the expansion in incapacity profit caseload between 2018 and 2023 got here from the rise in State Pension age, demographic developments and adjustments to legacy advantages. The goes “against the idea the idea that this increase is solely down to people now claiming benefits as a lifestyle choice,” analysts add.

JRF Senior Policy Adviser Iain Porter mentioned:  “Many people will be waiting anxiously to hear what the government is planning in their upcoming green paper but talk of cutting billions is causing deep fear among people with serious and ongoing health problems.”

The Department for Work & Pensions

The Department for Work & Pensions (PA Wire)

“The green paper needs to address the underlying causes of poor health, support people to stay in work where they can, and make moving into work a safer option for people who feel unable to take the risk of losing their benefits if a job doesn’t work out.

“The Chancellor has an unenviable task but she does have choices, and in an increasingly uncertain world, the financial pain and risk shouldn’t be passed on to those who can least afford it in the form of cuts”.

Changes to the work capability assessment are likely central to Labour’s plans to cut welfare spending, with a plan to “reform” the measure confirmed in the party’s manifesto. This is the main assessment used to determine a person’s ability to participate in the workforce, deciding if they qualify for any health elements of Universal Credit and how much work-related activity they must carry out, if any.

Ministers are understood to be looking to save £1.3 billion a year from changes to the WCA after pledging to match spending commitments made by the previous government – but not necessarily the policy detail. The party has said it will re-consult on the changes after the Conservatives’ consultation on the plans was found unlawful by a High Court judge for being “unfair” and “misleading.”

Through changes to the eligibility criteria, the changes would have seen 400,000 fewer people receiving the support they require, analysis by the DWP in April 2024 found, while only around 15,000 would have been helped into work.

Labour has also not ruled out changes to the Personal Independence Payment (PIP), despite this not being an out-of-work benefit. Unlike the WCA, assessments for PIP set out to determine if someone needs help with extra living costs, even if they’re working.

The DWP has announced 1,000 new work coaches ahead of the upcoming Green Paper (Joe Giddens/PA)

The DWP has announced 1,000 new work coaches ahead of the upcoming Green Paper (Joe Giddens/PA) (PA Wire)

The earlier authorities had additionally consulted on adjustments like means-testing the profit, introducing vouchers for specified prices as a substitute of money funds, or introducing new, decrease charges of fee.

However, analysts at Resolution Foundation have suggested towards this, arguing that it could go towards the central goal of PIP. Instead, the influential suppose tank argues, Labour ought to take into account extra common assessments, enhancing the expertise of coming off health-related advantages, and specializing in long-term enhancements over short-term cuts.

Louise Murphy, Senior Economist on the Resolution Foundation, mentioned: “Britain is getting older and sicker as a nation. The consequence is a fast-rising working-age incapacity and disability benefits bill, which is on track to rise by £32 billion over the 2020s.

“Rather than focus solely on restricting eligibility for support, reforms should reduce the financial gap between basic and health-related out-of-work benefits that incentivises health-related claims. Far more can be done to boost exits too, which will require investment in the functioning of the benefit system and rebuilding trust among claimants.

“While the Government is keen to score short-term welfare savings ahead of the 26 March, truly effective reforms will take time to deliver.”

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/dwp-pip-labour-changes-march-benefits-b2710290.html