Title: The future of welfare reform
1The future of welfare reform
- Stephen McKay
- University of Birmingham
- s.d.mckay_at_bham.ac.uk
- twitter.com/socialpolicy
- www.benefits.org.uk
2Changes in benefit levels under New Labour
Couple with two children aged under 11 Income Support If CPI uprating
April 1997 121.75
April 2009 230.47 150.39
Single person aged 18-24 Income Support If CPI uprating
April 1997 38.90
April 2009 50.95 48.05
3Strongly agree there should be higher benefits
for the poor (GB), 1987-2007
4Coalition Government
- Cutters and reformers
- Treasury and IDS/CSJ
- Emergency budget 2010 saving 11bn in 2014/15
- Comprehensive Spending Review 2010 7bn
- Universal Credit 2010
52010 budget changes saving 11bn in 2014/5
- Indexation by CPI (5.8 bn)
- Note VAT rises in January, and benefits increase
by inflation in September, so no immediate
'compensation' - Changes to Tax Credits (3bn) new disregard for
income cuts restrictions to backdating removal
from higher incomes no baby bonus - Housing Benefit reform (1.8bn) caps on levels
changes for social tenants move to 30th
percentile reduced by 10 if JSA for 12months - Freeze on Child Benefit (1bn)
- DLA new medical tests (1bn)
- An end to asset-based welfare (CTF 560m, SG
115m) - Relatively favourable treatment of pensioners,
triple lock and higher Pension Credit (-1bn)
6Comprehensive Spending Review 2010 saving
another 7bn in 2014/5
- Child Benefit removed from higher earners (2½
bn) - ESA time limit (12 months) (2bn)
- WTC Freeze in the basic and 30 hour elements
(635m) new couples hours rule (390m)
childcare element reduced (385m) PAYE real-time
information (300m) - But Child Tax Credit increased (-560m)
- Council Tax Benefit 10 cut (490m), and
localised - Overall benefits cap (270m)
- State Pension Age to be 66 by 2020
- EMAs all but eliminated
- Cuts to DWP/HMRC admin costs
7Housing Benefit Latest 30/11/2010
- Caps and 30th percentile limit introduced for new
claims in April 2011. - Existing customers exempt for up to 9 months from
the date their claim is reviewed by their local
authority. (i.e. generally up to January 2012.) - New discretionary powers for local authorities to
make direct payments to landlords in return for
reducing their rents. - SSAC (Nov-2010) The Committees report
recommends that the Government should not go
ahead with the package of amendments proposed.
8Universal Credit key structural issues
hampering reform
- The unit of assessment (individual or family)
- Who gets the payment (wallet v purse)
- Period of assessment and payment (and effects on
family budgeting) - Interactions with contributory and other benefits
and entitlements
9Universal Credit key changes I
- Integrated benefit in place of Income Support,
income-based Jobseekers Allowance,
income-related Employment and Support Allowance,
Housing Benefit, Child Tax Credit and Working Tax
Credit. - benefit rates for people not in work will
generally be the same as under the current system - a basic personal amount with additional amounts
for disability, caring responsibilities, housing
costs, and children. (? childcare costs ?) - Households both to claim in couples
- Earnings disregards zero for single adults but
sizeable for most other groups (though reduced if
on housing support)
10Universal Credit key changes II
- The same benefit as hours of work vary removing
most cliff edges at 16/24/30 hours. (?
Conditionality ?) - 65 taper rate (76 incl Tax, NI)
- Self-Employed assumed to earn at least minimum
wage (though who observes the hours?) - The same capital rules as currently apply to
Income Support - Two systems from 2013 - ? a better-off issue
11Earnings disregards
- Max disregards and floors (reduced by 1.5 times
housing costs) - Increase if children present
Maximum Floor
Single person 0 0
Couple 2 ch 161 25
LP 1 ch 148 40
Disabled person 135 40
12(No Transcript)
13Effect on marginal deduction rates
Now (millions) Universal Credit
Up to 60 0.9 0.8
60-70 0.2 0.4
70-80 1.7 2.0
80-90 0.4 0.0
Over 90 0.1 ..
Over 60 2.4 2.4
Over 70 2.2 2.0
14Universal Credit remaining issues
- Fate of all benefits outside of UC including
Carers Allowance Child Benefit to be fully
means-tested by 2017? Why not include more? - Social Fund Crisis Loans CCGs moved to LAs
Budgeting Loans, Maternity Grants and Cold
Weather Payments in UC - Shared care, only one parent eligible to receive
the child element of Universal Credit. - Passported benefits, new arrangements.
15The future?
- Role of contributory benefits and other
non-means-tested benefits outside UC - Contributory Jobseekers Allowance will continue
in its current form but with the same earnings
rules (such as disregards and tapered withdrawal)
as Universal Credit - Many details still unknown scope to influence
policy development?
16Assessment
- Few changes to average deduction rates, a lot
riding on transparency and easier administration - Transparency versus existing budgetting
- Tensions in policy (especially Council Tax
Benefit, JSA new HB rule) - Future for Child Maintenance (C-MEC)