The Work and Pensions Committee has pressed
Chancellor to honour the commitment
made by the former Chancellor, , to uprate benefits in April
2023 in line with the September 2022 CPI rate. When questioned in
Parliament, the Chancellor stated that the Government “will make
announcements about that in due course,” sparking doubts about
the likelihood of uprating. The Secretary of State is required by
law to review certain benefit rates annually to ensure they
retain their value.
The gap between the September 2021 CPI rate used to increase
benefits and the actual rate of inflation in April 2022 means
that people who claim benefits including Universal Credit are
already seeing a real-terms fall in the value of their income
during 2022. The impact of continuing high inflation and rapidly
rising prices will increase the gap between the rate at which
benefits are paid and the cost of living.
The letter to is part of the Committee’s
continuing work looking into the impact of rising food and energy
costs on people on the lowest incomes.
Rt Hon MP, Chair of the Work and
Pensions Committee, said:
“Prices are continuing to rise at unprecedented rates and
inflation is unlikely to abate soon. People on the lowest incomes
are increasingly struggling to get by on the essentials and,
because of the jump in inflation between September 2021 and April
2022, benefits claimants’ incomes have fallen sharply in real
terms this year. The former Chancellor assured Parliament
there would be a “catch up” next April.
The Chancellor must honour his predecessor’s pledge to uprate
benefits in the usual manner, in line with inflation. Without it,
countless families risk being pushed further into crushing
poverty as they are forced to stretch the same money over higher
prices.”