DWP says 150,000 more people pushed into poverty by benefit cuts, not 250,000 as forecast said before U-turn – UK politics live | Politics


DWP says 150,000 more people pushed into poverty by benefit cuts – not 250,000 as forecast said before U-turn

The Department for Work and Pensions has just published an analysis saying that, allowing for the concesssions announced last week, the welfare cuts will still push an extra 150,000 people into relative poverty.

Here is the key chart from the document.

Impact analysis of UC and Pip cuts
Impact analysis of UC and Pip cuts Photograph: DWP

In March, when the government published an impact assessment of its original plans, that said the plans would push an extra 250,000 people into relative poverty.

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Key events

Benefit cuts will have ‘negligible’ impact on number of children and pensioners in poverty due to concessions, DWP says

The Department for Work and Pensions has said the impact of its UC and Pip cuts on pensioners and children will now be “negligible” in the light of the concessions announced at the end of last week.

In its updated assessment released today, it says:

Excluding the impact of the additional employment support, it is estimated that there will be an additional 150,000 working age adults in relative poverty after housing costs in FYE [financial year end] 2030 as a result of the modelled changes to social security, compared to baseline projections. The impact on the number of pensioners and children in poverty is expected to be negligible. These latest policy changes reduce the poverty impact because existing recipients are now protected. The poverty impacts occur from potential future recipients no longer receiving the money which was assumed in the baseline projections.

According to the impact assessment published in March, the original plans would have pushed an extra 50,000 children into poverty.

The DWP is also stressing that today’s impact assessment does not take into account the impact of the measures it is planning to get more benefit claimants into work. It says:

This estimate does not include any potential positive impact of the bolstered £1billion annual funding, by FYE 2030, or the additional £300m of support in this SR period that is being brought forward. These measures will support those with disabilities long-term health conditions into employment, which we expect to mitigate the poverty impact among people it supports into work.

After the spring statement Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, claimed she was “absolutely certain” that the proposed welfare cuts would not lead to poverty going up because they would also lead to more people finding jobs.

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