The House

We need a boost to benefits to help households through the di cult months ahead

- Stephen Timms Labour MP for East Ham and chair of the ork and Pensions Select Committee

The Work and Pensions Select Commi ee has a full programme ahead. We shall publish the third of our three reports on the impact of George Osborne’s 2015 pension freedom reforms, as well as reports on childcare costs for parents in receipt of Universal Credit and on health assessment­s for bene ts.

A new inquiry will assess the child maintenanc­e system and how e ectively it supports families living in poverty. We shall also be inquiring into the government’s Plan for Jobs. e former prime minister claimed 12 times in the House of Commons between November 2021 and July 2022 that employment was higher than before the pandemic. is was untrue – as he accepted when pressed on it at the Liaison Commi ee in March – but he carried on saying it anyway.

ere has been a sharp fall in the number of self-employed people, and a signi cant number of over-50s did not return to work a er the pandemic. ey are not claiming bene t, so the unemployme­nt claimant count remains very low, but they aren’t working either. Employers are nding it very hard to ll vacancies.

e government set a target for its Way to Work initiative that by June Jobcentres should support 500,000 unemployed people into work in six months. It has announced that it has met the target. However, o cial statistics show that, in every six-month period for 20 years, at least 700,000 unemployed people moved into work. We shall be taking a careful look at the impact of Way to Work and the rest of the Plan for Jobs.

We want to know whether the Shared Prosperity Fund is an adequate replacemen­t for the European Social Fund; whether Jobcentre work coaches could be more e ective; and whether employment support should be provided to people who do not claim bene ts – like older people who have dropped out – and, if so, how.

e claimant count is historical­ly low, but youth unemployme­nt is much higher. And unemployme­nt among black young men is twice as high as among white young men. Employment among disabled people is much lower than the overall rate. What more can be done, when employers are crying out for sta , to bring into employment people who have been unable to work in the past, and how can Jobcentres make sure jobseekers are well-equipped for the vacancies available? Which internatio­nal examples can we learn from?

We will continue to assess the impact of the cost of living crisis. Bene ts are at a historical­ly low level. ey were increased in April by only three per cent, but in ation is now running at four times that, and still rising. In July, we called for deductions from bene ts – to repay things like historic tax credit overpaymen­ts and Universal Credit advances

– to be paused until in ation eases, to help hard-pressed families through the very di cult months ahead. We pointed out the need to raise the overall bene t cap – not increased since it was introduced almost a decade ago – in time for next April’s uprating. And we called for an evidence-based strategy to increase Pension Credit take-up, to support older people during the crisis.

e Department of Work and Pensions has become very reluctant to publish evidence. In a le er to the Secretary of State in June, I listed seven major reports that the Department had commi ed to publish. In her reply in July, the secretary of state at the time didn’t commit to publishing any of them. Withholdin­g this informatio­n no doubt spares ministers from awkward questions, but it fuels suspicion, and makes people think the department can’t be trusted – an increasing­ly widely

held view, unfortunat­ely.

“Raise the overall benefit cap in time for next April’s uprating”

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