Shocking rise in families affected by new benefit cap
Renfrewshire has seen a rise in the number of households being affected by the UK government’s new benefit cap, the Scottish Greens claim.
Ross Greer, Green MSP for the West of Scotland is urging the Scottish Government to use devolved powers to mitigate the policy, in the same way that the bedroom tax was offset, to prevent an average household losing around £2,000 a year.
The UK government’s new benefit cap started to take effect in November last year and lowered the amount of support that a household can receive to £384.62 or £257.69 a week depending on circumstances.
The party’s report shows that as a result, 3,700 families have been affected, an increase of over 3,000 compared to the previous cap.
Mr Greer said:“Seven years into the Tories’cruel agenda of cuts, we now see the terrible impact on children in Renfrewshire.
“By reducing the social security support available, while ignoring rising housing costs, the UK government has pushed an additional 725 per cent of households into potential poverty and homelessness.
“Our analysis shows that to mitigate this unfair UK policy, the Scottish Government could take the same approach as it rightly did with the hated bedroom tax, and use its powers over Discretionary Housing Payments to end the misery caused by the benefit cap.
“This would cost between one and two million pounds a year, a drop in the ocean given the annual Scottish budget of around £30 billion, but it would make a huge difference to the lives of vulnerable families across Scotland.”