330 likes | 340 Views
An overview of the Welfare Reforms The Welfare Benefits Unit Heather Theobold October 2012. Welfare Reform. Welfare Reform. Aims to: Improve work incentives Simplify the benefits system Make it less costly to administer Make significant savings
E N D
An overview of the Welfare ReformsThe Welfare Benefits UnitHeather TheoboldOctober 2012
Welfare Reform Aims to: • Improve work incentives • Simplify the benefits system • Make it less costly to administer • Make significant savings ‘a life on benefits will no longer be an option’ Ian Duncan Smith
Benefits Changes 2011 • £190 Health in Pregnancy Grant abolished • £500 Sure Start Maternity Grant paid to first child only • Child Trust Fund stopped for those born after 1/1/11 • Child Benefit frozen for 3 years • Most benefits increased by CPI (Consumer Price Index) not RPI (Retail Price Index) • Education Maintenance Allowance abolished
Migration to Employment and Support Allowance • Commenced October 2010 • Change to Limited Capability for Work Assessment in March 2011 • Protection of amount of benefit received leading to a static income for those transferred • Increase in number of jobseekers.
Employment and Support Allowance April 2012 Contributory work-related activity group limited to 12 months Waived NI contributions rules for young people abolished
Housing Benefit • Main changes affect Private Rented Sector • Local Housing Allowance
Housing Benefit Deductions for non-dependants increased
Local Housing Allowance April ‘11 £15 weekly top up ends Max LHA level 4 bedroom rate Maximum national upper limit Additional bedroom for overnight non-resident carer
Local Housing Allowance • Reduction in Rates • Reduced to 30th percentile from April ‘11 for new claims • Re-assessed from ‘Anniversary Date’ for existing claimants • 9 months transitional protection January ‘12
Local Housing Allowance Jan ‘12 Local Housing Allowance April ‘12 Shared room rate for 35 year-olds • Rates set annually, not monthly
Local Housing Allowance Estimated impact “We estimate that, in total, 99 per cent of cases assessed under the Local Housing Allowance arrangements (1.02 million at March 2010) will be affected in some way by the changes to the Local Housing Allowance arrangements ” (Explanatory memo to SSAC para 40)
Discretionary Housing Payments “There should be no need with the discretionary allowance that anyone should be made homeless. “There is no need for councils to think or to worry about the idea of having to put people into homeless accommodation.” November 2010 Iain Duncan Smith Secretary of State for Work and Pensions
Changes to Tax Credits • Couples must work 24 hours, one doing at least 16 hours • 50+returners category withdrawn, 60+introduced (16 hrs work) • Family element included in full assessment, removal of £40,000 threshold • First £2,500 of income reduction will be ignored • Backdating reduced to 1 month
Lone Parents May 2012 Income Support abolished for lone parents whose youngest child is 5, (they need to claim Jobseekers Allowance)
HB changes 2012-2013 • April 2013 • Size criteria rules for working age customers living in social rented sector
Other Benefits changes 2013 January • Child Benefit withdrawn from higher rate taxpayers April • Household benefit payments capped • PIP introduced • Housing Benefit to be reassessed annually October • Introduction of Universal Credit
Personal Independence Payments • Replace DLA for 16 to 64 • 2 components @ standard and enhanced rates • Awarded and reviewed through an objective assessment process. • Aim to target those with greatest need for: • support; and • to overcome barriers
Universal Credit • Planned introduction 2013 • One single benefit for working age people • Replaces existing income based benefits: • Income Support • Jobseeker’s Allowance (IB) • Employment & Support Allowance (IR) • Working Tax Credit • Child Tax Credit • Housing Benefit
Universal Credit • = • single benefit of many elements • Income Element – living costs • Housing Element – rent or mortgage costs • Disability Element– long-term incapacity for work • Child Element – children and child care costs
Universal CreditClaimant Commitmentto agree – on line, telephone, face to face Work-related requirement No work-related requirement Work-focused interviews Work-focused interviews and work prep All work-related requirement
Universal Credit • Simpler! ?? • Transitional protection for those already claiming Working Tax Credits • New claimants for UC with £16,000 or over will be excluded • Couples with one member under PCQA need to claim UC and not PC • Some existing premiums abolished
Household Benefit Cap • For single person proposed at £18,200 a year or £350 per week • Family proposed at £26,000 a year or £500 per week • Exemptions include working households or on DLA/PIP. • Estimated 50,000households with reduced income
Localism Agenda • April 2013 Council Tax Benefit abolished • New LA schemes introduced • Cost 10% less than CTB • Social Fund – Crisis Loans and Community Care Grants abolished • Replaced by local LA schemes, food vouchers, furniture stores, food banks etc
Benefits changes 2014-17 • No new claims for Tax Credits • Migration to Universal Credit for all - in and out of work • Monthly payments of Universal Credit