The Work and Pensions Committee has published
the Government
response to the previous committee’s report on Universal
Credit and survival sex.
During the inquiry in the last Parliament, the committee heard
evidence that problems with Universal Credit and delays in
receiving payment were pushing people—predominantly women—into
sex work to obtain basics needed to survive, including money,
food and shelter. Among the recommendations in the report,
published
in October 2019, was a call for the DWP to scrap the minimum
five week wait for UC. In the interim, the Committee called on
the Government to introduce non-repayable Advances for vulnerable
people claiming the benefit.
In October
2020, the current Committee also recommended measures to cut
the wait for a first UC payment, to ensure that everyone has
enough money for basics such as food and heating during the wait
for their initial monthly payment.
The Government response to the 2019 report echoes the
response to the report from last year, rejecting the need for
non-repayable starter payments.
Rt Hon MP, Chair of the Work and Pensions Committee,
said: “The experiences of survival sex heard by the last
committee act as a reminder of the hugely damaging impact that
the wait for a first Universal Credit payment has been having on
so many for so long. The Government’s latest rejection of
constructive proposals for cutting the five week wait goes down
as another wasted opportunity to rectify the harm it is causing
to many vulnerable people.”
The current Committee’s report drew on evidence from both
organisations and individuals which suggested that a significant
proportion of people faced financial and other difficulties
during the wait for a first UC payment. Among the Committee’s
recommendations was the introduction of a starter payment for all
people claiming for the first time, equivalent to three weeks of
the standard allowance.
The Government’s response said
that there was ‘no need’ for a starter payment and dismissed the
need to conduct or commission any research on possible links
between UC and rising foodbank use, increased rent arrears and
psychological distress.