Latest Public Sector News

15.07.13

£26,000 a year benefits cap comes into effect nationwide

The benefits cap of £500 a week on people of working age has started to come into effect across England, Scotland and Wales today, following a pilot in four London boroughs.

The £500 weekly cap applies to couples and lone parents – single people will be capped at £350. The Government says the limit, which will result in thousands of families in high-rent areas losing cash from their benefits, is to ensure that people do not get more from the benefit system than the average working family gets paid.  

The cap includes jobseekers’ allowance and housing benefit, but many people are exempt from the cap if they get certain types of payment at the moment – Disability Living Allowance, Personal Independence Payment, Attendance Allowance, Industrial Injuries Benefits (and equivalent payments as part of a war disablement pension or the Armed Forces Compensation Scheme), the support component of the Employment and Support Allowance, or a War Widow’s or War Widower’s Pension. If a household contains anyone qualifying for Working Tax Credit, they are also exempt.

The roll-out, which begins today, will be complete by September 30.

Work and pensions secretary Iain Duncan Smith said: “The benefit cap returns fairness to the benefits systems. It ensures the taxpayer can have trust in the welfare system and it stops sky-high claims that make it impossible for people to move into work.

“The limit of £500 a week ensures no-one claims more in benefits than the average household and there is a clear reason for people to get a job – as those eligible for Working Tax Credit are exempt.”

The cap, while high-profile, will actually not save that much money compared to the other welfare reforms and freezes: about £110m a year, according to the BBC.

The cap will apply to the following benefits:

Bereavement Allowance

Carer’s Allowance

Child Benefit

Child Tax Credit

Employment and Support Allowance (not the support component)

Guardian’s Allowance

Housing Benefit

Incapacity Benefit

Income Support

Jobseeker’s Allowance

Maternity Allowance

Severe Disablement Allowance

Widowed Parent’s Allowance (or Widowed Mother’s Allowance or Widows Pension from before 9 April 2001)

Tell us what you think – have your say below or email [email protected]

Comments

John Allthwaite   15/07/2013 at 16:55

Good, but its too much still. Average wage is £18 K around our way, this is half as much again. Why should landlords rake it in from taxpayers, if folk cant pay rents they'll have to work out what folk can afford and stick we it. Damn good idea, why should folk on minimum pay tax for folk on dole or skiving to live life of riley

John Smart   16/07/2013 at 14:23

I would like to see the benefit figures with the housing benefit element removed. With a shortage of affordable housing private landlords are able to charge inflated rents knowing that local government will have to pay. When the misinformed hear the sum of £26.00O they think this is a cash amount and this is misleading. The majority of claimants are genuine but there will always be a few who will work the system to their own ends this includes some politicians and bankers. These are the people who we need to investigate not the weakest in our society.

Dancer   20/07/2013 at 22:28

The money saved on the benefit cap will affect genuine people as well as the scroungers. This money will be used to fund the Politicians rise of 11%. They are extremely generous to themselves - forget the working class who have paid into the system for years - they can be trod on. I feel the politicians are sticking their 2 fingers up at me who has worked full time for over 30 years. I feel they have wiped their feet on me and done nothing to improve my life.

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