Asked by The Lord Bishop of London To ask His Majesty’s Government
what impact the removal of free prescriptions for benefit claimants
who fail to look for work will have on their health, and the health
of the workforce. The Lord Bishop of London My Lords, I start by
thanking your Lordships’ House for giving time for this important
debate. I also thank the House of Lords Library for its very
helpful briefing and the Minister for his engagement with me
and...Request free trial
Asked by
To ask His Majesty’s Government what impact the removal of free
prescriptions for benefit claimants who fail to look for work
will have on their health, and the health of the workforce.
My Lords, I start by thanking your Lordships’ House for giving
time for this important debate. I also thank the House of Lords
Library for its very helpful briefing and the Minister for his
engagement with me and for our helpful meeting earlier this week
about this debate.
The measures we are discussing today relate to the announcement
that the Government made in the Back to Work Plan and the Autumn
Statement that people on universal credit who do not engage in
activities designed to increase their skills and improve their
employability after 18 months of support will have their claim
terminated. With that termination, their accompanying passported
benefits, including free prescriptions, will also be stopped.
Benefit claimants may disengage from Jobcentre Plus for many
reasons, some of which I suspect we do not completely understand,
and not solely because they have failed to look for work. I have
brought this debate forward from a health perspective, and the
central frame of my remarks today is around health inequalities,
because the Back to Work Plan as it stands could serve to
exacerbate these inequalities. There are many complexities within
universal credit, and many exemptions and allowances that are
made for vulnerabilities and medical conditions that are to be
commended. I was grateful to hear about some of them at the
meeting I had earlier in the week with the Minister and officials
from DWP and DHSC. I understand that the number of people who
will be affected by this is small: they are those without a
vulnerability that would exempt them from having their claim
ended, and who do not have an additional factor attached to their
claim.
However, I also understand that those who will face this measure
will have already been zero-rated for six months, for which time
their prescription fee exemption will have already been removed.
I believe the mitigation there is that if they have a health
condition, they can access low-level prescriptions, such as an
asthma pump, until the time their claim is stopped. I know that
these mitigations and allowances are designed to reassure those
of us scrutinising these plans and, more importantly, those who
are fearful of losing the prescriptions they need. I appreciate
that this measure will impact only a small number of people,
whose prescriptions are likely to be of a low level, but I have
some significant concerns.
First, as this House is acutely aware, we are in a cost of living
crisis. The Royal Pharmaceutical Society published the results of
a survey of pharmacists earlier this year. Some 51% had
experienced an increase in the number of patients not collecting
their prescriptions in the six months before the survey, and 52%
reported an increase in patients asking for different items to be
prioritised due to affordability concerns. Some 67% had seen more
patients asking about cheaper, over the counter alternatives to
their prescriptions. If prescriptions that were once free are no
longer so, a person whose universal credit has just been stopped
may not be able to afford their prescriptions. This is a serious
concern, especially when in so many other ways the cost of living
crisis has been an incubator of the gaping inequalities that
remain.
Secondly, it is those who are unable to engage with Jobcentre
Plus who are most likely to be subject to poor conditions that
determine their health, or ill health. It is these people who are
most likely to make up the “plus” of the Core20PLUS5. It is
important that all engagement with them is not lost when their
claim ends. If they struggle to engage with public services, any
poor health they experience may worsen if they do not take the
medication prescribed. Even if the prescription is of a low
level, these prescriptions are fundamental to keeping us in good
health, and our being in good health will in turn relieve
pressure on the NHS. An acute asthma attack in A&E costs far
more to the public purse than someone’s routine inhaler and has a
far more profound impact on the person concerned.
I would be very interested to hear from the Minister how the
department is working to understand the reasons for people’s
disengagement from the support it offers, and what resource there
might be for the department to offer the steadier relational
support that I know Jobcentre Plus hopes to offer. Have they
considered a way to identify those who are extremely vulnerable,
and work with the health services to ensure that they do not fall
off the radar, perhaps by informing the GP that their claim has
ended?
Thirdly, I appreciate that this measure is a deterrent from
disengagement and is designed to act as an encouragement into
work. I was unaware, until meeting the Minister this week, that
parliamentary legislation will be required to bring forward these
changes. I have no objection to that in principle, but I am
concerned that, with a limited amount of parliamentary time,
there is a risk that this legislation will never appear. I am
concerned that this proposed measure and the press coverage,
which I acknowledge was not completely accurate or helpful, seems
designed solely to deter, causing anxiety and fear. This is
concerning, even given the small number of people it will impact,
and when we are dealing with changes to a highly complex system,
it often increases anxiety. To use, or to threaten to use, health
measures in any way as a punitive consequence for disengagement
is, I believe, a misuse of power and could have a significant
impact on the lives of people who need to be helped, not
punished. Can the Minister confirm exactly what is needed to be
brought in by primary legislation—whether it is the whole Back to
Work plan—and share whether he has any expectation of when it
might progress?
The expansion of the health programmes within the Back to Work
plan are welcome and I know that they have been commended as part
of the Autumn Statement debate. Health and work are linked, and
prioritising the health of the workforce is required for a
thriving economy. Part of that is to ensure that people have the
option to take time off if they need it, which under the current
sick pay system may not always be possible. This is especially
true for those in insecure work. A report by WPI Economics,
Making Statutory Sick Pay Work, highlights stories of workers
coming back to work while still sick or injured because they
cannot afford to take time off. Can the Minister say whether the
Government have any plans to examine statutory sick pay and
ensure that those who are working have the option to take time
off while they are ill?
On a slightly different note, I was very surprised to read in the
Lords Library briefing that the total cost to the NHS of exempt
prescription charges from community pharmacies in England was
£9.9 billion, while paid-for prescriptions made up only £500
million. It makes me wonder whether installing universal free
prescriptions would be less costly than is sometimes assumed and
whether the savings to the public purse from better public health
may well be worth it.
I again thank the Minister and look forward to hearing the
speeches of noble Lords participating. Worsening health
inequalities is one of the worst health outcomes of recent times
and it requires a multifaceted approach. It is important to
consider how people’s health may be impacted by measures that are
not directly health based, and I feel encouraged that the Chamber
has decided to debate this.
3.05pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I thank the right reverend Prelate the for securing this debate
on the end of free prescriptions for certain benefit claimants.
She covered, in detail, the operational effectiveness of this and
how it works out in practice; I will talk about the philosophy
that lies behind the proposal.
As I said in yesterday’s debate on the Autumn Statement, I am
angry. I saved my anger from yesterday’s debate for today. It is
unfortunate that the noble Viscount the Minister, for whom I have
considerable respect, has to be the butt of my anger, but my
anger exists nevertheless. I am angry about this cruel and
outrageous proposal that reflects so badly on a Government that
have already lost much credibility and honour—I am angry and sick
to my stomach. My immediate reaction when I read this policy was
to ask, “Are we back to the workhouse?”. I am angry, because we
have known for almost two centuries that the policy of less
eligibility simply does not work—not only does it not work; it
leads to further cruelty in a race to the bottom, devoid of
compassion and sense.
I will talk history. I am sorry that we have lost the noble Lord,
, who gave us a history lesson
in the previous debate today, for which three of us were
present—but here is some more history. I will talk about the Poor
Law and the principle of less eligibility that played significant
roles in shaping the approach to poverty and welfare in the 19th
century, particularly in the United Kingdom.
The Poor Law, a system of social welfare that dated back to the
16th century, underwent significant reforms in the 1830s with the
implementation of the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834. The core
principle of the Poor Law was the provision a relief to the poor
through workhouses, which were intended to be austere
institutions to discourage dependence on state assistance. The
workhouse system aimed to make poverty less desirable than the
lowest paying jobs available, thus enforcing a concept of less
eligibility. That meant that conditions in the workhouse were
intentionally made to be harsher than the worst situations
outside, creating a deterrent against seeking public
assistance.
Less eligibility sought to create a clear distinction between the
deserving and the undeserving poor, with the belief that the fear
of destitution would drive people to seek alternative means of
support. The workhouse environment was designed to be Spartan and
unpleasant, reinforcing the idea that dependence on state support
should be a last resort.
It became clear, however, that the Poor Law and less eligibility
meant the system was dehumanising and punitive, pushing
vulnerable individuals and families to the brink of despair. The
workhouse conditions were often harsh, further exacerbating the
emotional toll on those seeking assistance. Charles Dickens,
through his literary work such as Oliver Twist, on the Poor Law
and its bastard children, vividly depicted the hardships faced by
the poor in workhouses, contributing to public awareness and
debate. Over time, society’s attitudes shifted and the harshness
of the Poor Law system began to be questioned. As the 19th
century progressed, there were calls for reform and a more
compassionate approach to poverty. Eventually, the Poor Law
system was largely dismantled in the early 20th century, making
way for the development of modern welfare programmes.
In retrospect, the Poor Law and less eligibility reflected the
prevailing ideologies of the time, attempting to address poverty
through deterrence rather than systemic support. The approach was
rooted in a belief in self-sufficiency, but it ultimately led to
widespread suffering and hardship for those already marginalised
by poverty. The lessons learned from the shortcomings of the Poor
Law should influence contemporary discussions on social welfare
and the importance of a compassionate and inclusive approach to
addressing poverty and inequality. However, it is as if the
Government have forgotten these lessons.
My question to the Minister is: has he read his Dickens? Does he
realise that, not as an individual but as the representative of
the Government here today, he is playing the part of the villain
in an up-to-date Dickens novel and that he is, in his official
role, if not personally, acting as a modern-day Mr Bumble, the
cruel manager of the workhouse in Oliver Twist, devoid of
compassion? I was struck by the remarks of the noble Baroness,
Lady Vere, in the discussions yesterday, when she complained that
this was a compassionate policy. I think it is identical to Mr
Bumble, the cruel manager claiming to be compassionate.
When we look at the people who will be affected by this policy,
we do not really know much about their characteristics—I think
that was the point that was made—so we do not know who will be
harmed by this policy. Make no mistake: the intention of this
policy is to harm people. I suspect that few if any people fit
the tabloid caricature of the feckless, workshy scrounger, but we
do know that these people are poor. We also know that they are
ill, and we know this policy is designed to make them poorer and
iller. To put it at its clearest, even the feckless, workshy
scrounger deserves the medical treatment they require.
I hope the Minister can hear history speaking to him, saying that
this policy is a component of the failed idea of less
eligibility, and it is bound to fail and create more problems
than it seeks to address.
3.13pm
(GP)
My Lords, it is a great pleasure to follow the powerful speech of
the noble Lord, , who has reminded
us of how in many ways our society is going back to Victorian
times with the level of inequality and the insecurity affecting
so many people’s lives. In the times the noble Lord was talking
about, the spectre of the debtors’ prison hung over so many
families. We are potentially back in that situation now, except
that of course the spectre now is of benefit sanctions, which hit
so many people utterly unjustifiably.
As the noble Lord said, poverty is a feature of our system, not
an individual failing. I thank the right reverend Prelate for
securing this terribly important debate. It is a grave pity that
we do not see on the speakers list any Tory Back-Benchers
stepping up to defend the policy—although I note that one noble
Baroness on the Tory Benches has joined us to listen to the
debate. Perhaps the others will read it in Hansard later.
The right reverend Prelate talked about “significant concerns”,
in the manner of her speeches. I would go much stronger: this is
a disgusting piece of dog-whistle politics targeting the most
vulnerable in our society and, as the right reverend Prelate
said, possibly having minimal effect in saving the Government
money and likely costing them money, while spreading fear in an
attempt to activate some of the least desirable emotions in our
society.
I am going to take a somewhat different approach from the noble
Lord, Lord Davies, and look at the medical impact. The right
reverend Prelate clearly and cleverly set out the debate by
talking about the impact on individual health and the health of
the workforce, so my speech will cover those two areas. I looked
in some detail at to whom free subscriptions are available. There
is a group of conditions—cancer, diabetes, hypothyroidism and
epilepsy are among them—the sufferers of which automatically have
the right to free prescriptions. I ask the Minister to put on the
record that, if you have those conditions, even if you are
affected by these rules, you will still get your cancer drugs and
diabetes drugs. It is incredibly important to put that on the
record for people to understand.
Let us think about some of the conditions that are not included
in what I hope is an automatic exemption from prescription
charges. Mental health conditions are not on that list. As the
right reverend Prelate highlighted, asthma medications are not on
that list. Of course, free prescriptions for everybody would be
the ideal situation for our society, for the health of both
individuals and the workforce—and I point out that that is Green
Party policy and where the NHS started. Another group of drugs
taken by huge numbers of people, particularly older members of
society, is statins, which treat high levels of cholesterol that
can lead to cardiovascular disease, heart attacks, coronary heart
disease, angina and stroke. Can the Minister confirm that
statins, asthma medication and drug treatments for mental health
conditions will all be covered by these sanctions? More than
that, what about counselling? Will the NHS continue to provide
counselling to people who need it if they are affected by these
sanctions? I am not sure I have seen that explained.
I want to put this in a broader context—and it is a great pity
that none of the House’s legal experts is taking part in this
debate. In the World Health Organization’s constitution, to which
we are of course signed up as a member, the
“highest attainable standard of health”
is a fundamental right of every human being. More than that, I
hope the Minister will acknowledge that the right to life is a
fundamental human right. If we are going to deny people statins,
asthma drugs and mental health treatments, how does that square
with the basic right to life, let alone the best attainable
standard of healthcare, which we are signed up to through the
WHO?
I turn to a broader question, on which the Minister might agree
with me a little. Your Lordships’ House may be aware that
yesterday, under a new methodology, a survey by the Office for
National Statistics suggested that the current unemployment rate
is actually 3.5%. We have a labour market in which the essential
problem is a shortage of medical professionals, care workers, HGV
drivers and construction workers. We need to start to think about
human time, energy and talents—scarce resources that need to be
nurtured, cultivated and looked after. We will be having a debate
later on early years, in which I will be participating. We need
to give people the best possible start in life, so they can
contribute best to our society.
The right reverend Prelate hinted at this: the best way we can
look after people and ensure that they are fit to contribute to
our society—it might be through paid work, voluntary work or
caring for family members—is to offer security, which is what
people need in all those situations. This is why the Green
Party’s alternative Autumn Statement said, “Let’s lift the basic
level of universal credit payment by £40 a week”. I put it to the
Minister that giving people unconditional payments—indeed, the
Green Party’s aspiration is for a universal basic income—and a
universal, secure payment that meets their needs means that they
can be healthy and can contribute to society through paid work
and other means. We would all be richer. Making people ill and
forcing them into impossible situations, even fear, is a huge
problem.
I circle back to the point I started with—the noble Lord, Lord
Davies, also mentioned it—concerning Victorian times. Too often,
poor health is seen as an individual characteristic, yet we have
a deeply unhealthy society. We have terrible levels of air
pollution on our streets and in our homes. We have
terrible-quality homes with poor insulation, people cannot afford
to heat their homes and there the problem of mould, which has
been illustrated so tragically lately. To get a healthier and
more productive society, as well as the kind of growth the
Government are so keen on, the best thing to do is ensure that we
have free prescriptions and free support for everyone who needs
it. This would help everyone to contribute to our society as best
as they can, rather than punitive sanctions waved at some of the
most vulnerable people in our communities.
3.22pm
(LD)
My Lords, the right reverend Prelate the helpfully said in her
opening speech that she was in some ways surprised to see that
this issue would require legislation. I fear that may actually be
the point: that the whole purpose of this is to table something
and invite Members on this side of the House to vote against it,
so that the Government can somehow claim that we are being weak
on the workshy. I must say, whenever the Government find time for
something such as this—as noble Lords might expect, I think it is
wrong in principle and in practice—in lieu of other legislation
we have called for, such as on mental health, we have to question
their priorities and whether all we are seeing now is a political
agenda from a party playing out its last few months in
office.
I turn to the substantive issue and why I think this is wrong in
principle and in practice. On the principle, we need to
understand the rationale for prescription charges. We are not
paying for our drugs when we pay prescription charges; the
rationale is that people who can afford to do so should make a
contribution to the costs of operating the entire system of
dispensing prescriptions. Those people are working-age people, in
work. The whole system is based on that rationale. People who are
not of working age do not pay prescription charges: 70 year-old
millionaires—and, indeed, their 15 year-old children—do not pay
them. The whole system is based on this, so taking a segment of
people who are, by definition, not in work and magically putting
them in the in-work paying bucket is entirely inconsistent with
the whole scheme as it has been set up.
No deserving/undeserving judgment is made with prescription
charges; otherwise, we would be testing people’s incomes and
whether they had made themselves ill before getting a
prescription. We do not do that because that is not the
rationale. The rationale is that people who are in work and have
the means to pay, such as myself, should do so. I do not speak
for others, although I would have spoken for the noble Lord,
, had he been here, because he
is in a similar position, in that we are the kind of people who
should be paying prescription charges. In a few years, I will
stop because I will be deemed no longer of working age, so,
although I will have plenty more time here, my prescription
charges will cease. Being in work and being of working age are
the criteria for making contributions.
In principle, we are breaking that and I see no rationale for
doing so. Saying that you have not complied with a jobcentre
request and therefore you lose access to the scheme is so
inconsistent with everything else that has been set up. That is
particularly the case where an obvious response to the sanction
is that someone should seek the healthcare they need. Everything
in the prescription contribution system has been carefully
designed not to deter people from getting drugs. A whole bunch of
exemptions are wrapped around this to do that. To undermine it
seems entirely problematic.
I turn to the practical issues. The prescription charges are not
a fee for the medicines. They are completely unrelated to the
cost of the medicines; they are a contribution to the NHS. They
are capped at £111.60 per year and the cap is set, effectively,
by the prescription prepayment certificate. Anyone who needs more
prescriptions than would add up to that price is entitled,
whoever they are, to get a PPC. I assume that this will apply
equally to the cohort we are talking about today. If the claimant
has a condition that needs several prescriptions per year, we are
effectively fining them £111.60 per year. This is probably one
for the Minister’s DHSC colleagues but, given that we have set a
cap, I am curious why, if TfL can figure out when I have
travelled enough during a day to hit its daily transport cap, the
prescription pricing system—which is all computerised—cannot
figure out when I have hit the £111.60 cap and automatically
apply it. The obvious reason is that it is hoped that people will
keep paying beyond the cap. If we are to have a cap, let us help
people claim within it rather than send them over it. That is
particularly true here.
This £111.60 fine is now being levied as a sanction on top of all
the other sanctions for this group of claimants. The first option
is to pay the fine so that, if you need the medicines, you can go
off and get them. The second is to keep ticking the exemption
box. All sorts of people do this all the time. You run the risk
of getting a £100 fine plus the cost of the prescription penalty
charge notice at some point in future. Again, I am not saying
that to invite it. It is a very common phenomenon. It happens all
the time, so much so that the Public Accounts Committee down the
other end has done a report on it, which was very critical of
this whole system. It is quite expensive to administer and we
spend a lot of time chasing people around for this. A rational
response of someone in this category is: “Okay, here’s my choice:
£111.60 or take my chances. Maybe I will end up paying about the
same amount as and when they come and get me with one of these
penalty charge notices”.
The third option is for them to stop taking the drugs that they
need. That is the worst option, disastrous for all possible
outcomes. I am looking at the noble Viscount the Minister—from
the point of view of the benefits system, what possible interest
is there in having someone stop taking their drugs if the goal is
to get them back to work? I cannot see any circumstance in which
someone who needs the medicine for a physical or mental health
problem would be more fit for work if they stopped taking the
drugs than if they continued taking them. Therefore, I assume the
hope is that everyone will pay the fine and treat it as just
another financial sanction.
On the point made by the noble Lord, Lord Davies, the reality is
that we have seen this lots of times in previous economic cycles.
When there is a serious downturn in the economy, significant
numbers of people—this will vary geographically according to
where the downturn hits hardest—will move first to out-of-work
benefits and then to sickness benefits. I was brought up in a
posh bit of Sheffield but when my communities in South Yorkshire
lost the steel and then the coal in the 1970s and 1980s, you saw
entire communities moving from work to sickness benefit. What
they had really lost was hope. Hope had gone and the community
was devastated. People were sick in the sense that they felt
terrible. That expressed itself in all sorts of physical and
mental problems and they moved on to sickness benefit.
If you are in one of those communities, the solution is not
fining you £111.60. That will not give you back your hope or
encourage you to go out and take a job. I really fail to
understand why the Government think it will. We have seen this
play out before—it is politics. The Government must be seen to be
doing something; they are trying to artificially create some kind
of conflict where they are tough on the work-shy and people who
question this are somehow championing them. I think this is
completely the wrong target. I know politics must react to
things, but in this case it is reacting incredibly clumsily.
I am very grateful to the right reverend Prelate for the
opportunity to debate this issue. I leave the Minister with the
following questions. First, have the Government assessed how
affected people will split into those three categories? In
category one, they pay their £111.60 for a prepayment
certificate; in category two, they keep ticking the exemption box
and risk a fine; in category three, they stop taking the drugs.
For a policy of this significance, we need to understand—I assume
the Government have some data as they are proposing this—how
those people will split. If the numbers in category three are
significant, that is the most important area of concern.
Secondly, have the Government made any assessment of this measure
versus a financial sanction of the same value? If the intention
is to fine people for not going back to work, have they
considered a straight cash fine rather than this clumsy
prepayment certificate method? Thirdly, what measures will the
Government take to make people aware of the prepayment
certificate option, particularly if they move ahead with this? I
hope they will tell everyone not to keep paying the individual
prescriptions and to get a certificate as the cheapest
option.
3.31pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I thank all noble Lords for their contributions to this
short debate, especially the right reverend Prelate the for making it possible and
for her introduction. I remain grateful for her continued
commitment to the health and well-being of the nation, especially
the most vulnerable within it, and I thank her for all she does
in this respect.
Before I speak on the Motion, I would like to record my sadness
at the news that Lord Darling has died. Before becoming a valued
Member of this House, he was Chancellor during the global
financial crash. The country was fortunate to be in the hands of
someone of such ability and integrity. But as this is a DWP
debate, he was also a fine DWP Secretary of State, with whom I
had the privilege of working when I was a special adviser to
. Our country is the poorer for
his passing.
As we have heard, the trigger for this debate is the Government’s
proposal to close the universal credit claims of some people who
fail to meet employment-related requirements. As a result, they
would cease to have access to passported benefits, including free
prescriptions. The noble Lord, Lord Allan, explained the
rationale for a prescription charging policy, but the problem is
that this is not a health policy. It is a policy that would try
to use access to healthcare as a tool to enforce conditionality
in the welfare state. The right reverend Prelate the has highlighted some of
the real challenges of such an approach. As she, the noble
Baroness, Lady Bennett, and others, have said, this clearly risks
putting the health of some individuals at risk. It will clearly
not make them any more likely to work—less likely, if
anything—and it will probably end up costing the NHS more in the
long run, as the right reverend Prelate’s example of asthma
inhalers versus asthma attack treatment has shown.
The noble Lord, Lord Allan, is on to something on the point of
this policy. I am sorry to say that I think there is an attempt
to create dividing lines and say, “You do not really want to do
X”. To avoid jumping into that trap, I will say for the record
that we believe everyone who can work, should work. That has been
the basis of Labour’s policy in the past and will be again. The
welfare state was created to support those who could not support
themselves, and conditionality has been part of it from the
start. If people refuse to engage with the system, there must of
course be consequences, but not like this. The quid pro quo is
that the state should provide the help people need to get into
proper, sustainable jobs, and I have real questions about how
well it is doing that right now. Although that is a problem, I do
not think anyone really believes that this proposal is the
solution, and I think Ministers know that.
The OBR forecasts, after taking account of the Government’s
plans, suggest that the employment rate will remain static, there
will be 600,000 more people on sickness and disability benefits
and that that will put spending up 75%. That does not sound like
a plan that is likely to be effective in addressing its
ostensible objective. It is hard to understand what the
Government want to do with this.
In opening, the right reverend Prelate the said that, in her
conversations with the Minister, she realised that very few
people would be affected and that the media may have misreported
this. To be fair, I think they were meant to report it in the way
they had. I would not expect the right reverend Prelate to engage
in the politics, but I simply quote from the speech made to the
Conservative Party conference by the Chancellor of the Exchequer
. He said:
“It isn’t fair that someone who refuses to look seriously for a
job gets the same as someone trying their best”.
It was then briefed out that the intention was to signal this as
a crackdown on those who do not try very hard. The job of the
Minister, for whom we all have great respect, is to say that this
is one of two things: it is either a major crackdown, which
potentially risks the health of many people, or it does not make
much difference. I would like to know which it is, so could the
Minister explain that?
The most obvious question is how many people will be affected.
Has the DWP done a formal assessment of that? If so, please could
the Minister share it? If it has not, why not? Secondly, as my
noble friend Lord Davies asked, do we know which people will be
affected? Are they young or old? Do they have children? Could
they be single parents or carers? Who are they? Free
prescriptions are just one of the benefits passported from
universal credit. Others include dental treatment, help with
travel to hospital to get NHS treatment, free school meals for
kids and Sure Start maternity grants. Are those included in the
same policy?
The right reverend Prelate mentioned that the Minister had
indicated that most of these people will be on a nil universal
credit payment and therefore would not qualify anyway. Either
nobody in this position would be affected or some will be. What
is the process to distinguish between them? Will that action be
automatic, will a case be closed at a certain point, or will an
individual assessment be made? What safeguards will be put in
place to check whether people were failing to engage because of
health problems, whether physical or mental? Will this need extra
staff and, if so, what will that cost?
I cannot help but conclude that this policy is born of failure.
Britain remains the only country in the G7 where the employment
rate is still not back to pre-pandemic levels. Some 2.6 million
people are now shut out of work due to long-term sickness—the
highest number since records began. It is hard not to conclude
that a major contributory factor is that the Government have let
the NHS lurch from crisis to crisis, when waiting lists have
soared to 7.8 million. More and more people over 50 are out of
work due to long-term sickness. We all know that large numbers
are stranded on NHS waiting lists, who are desperate for
treatment or in pain. Many of those are mothers caring for older
relatives or other people who are sick or disabled, and they are
getting precious little help from the social care system, which
still goes unreformed, despite 13 years of promises.
The right reverend Prelate said that health and work are linked,
and she is absolutely right. It is quite right that health and
employment policies need to be considered together, especially
when we have these inactivity rates, but we need to do this in a
positive, strategic way. Labour has said that we would invest
£1.1 billion in the NHS to provide more appointments and get the
backlog down. We would recruit 8,500 more mental health staff. We
would also overhaul jobcentres, so that they can provide
personalised help and work in partnership with the NHS, employers
and others that can help people back into proper, well-paid,
sustainable jobs. We would create technical excellence colleges,
so that people get the skills that would help them get jobs in
their area and then bring the skills that are needed into those
areas.
That is the way forward—not a policy that grabs a few headlines
but probably will not make much difference anyway. We want a
proper, strategic approach to the labour market, working with the
health service to help get our country back to work. The social
security system is there to support those who cannot work and to
help those who can work get back into work. Does the Minister not
agree?
3.39pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for Work
and Pensions () (Con)
My Lords, I begin by expressing my own condolences at the loss of
the noble Lord, Lord Darling. I was shocked and greatly saddened
when I heard the news earlier today. He was a giant of a man, and
he was extremely helpful, indeed instrumental, in helping the
country through the financial crisis back in 2008 and
onwards.
It is a pleasure to close this important debate which, at its
heart, is about ensuring that more people who can work are
supported to do so and benefit from all the rewards of work. I
start by thanking all noble Lords for their valuable
contributions, in particular the right reverend Prelate the
for initiating this
debate. I also thank her for our meeting earlier this week, which
was greatly appreciated. Getting into work and ensuring that work
pays remains a key government priority. Building on the £7
billion employment package announced in the Spring Budget, the
Autumn Statement set out a further £2.5 billion investment in
employment support over the next five years. This support will
ensure that no claimant reaches 18 months of unemployment if they
have taken every reasonable step to comply with the jobcentre
support offered to them.
I will cover two or three points upfront. I was interested in the
very hard-hitting speeches from the noble Lord, , and the noble
Baroness, Lady Bennett. They both opined about the issues of
sanctions more broadly. It is fair to say that the right reverend
Prelate the alluded to some
misrepresentation in the press. I can think only that the noble
Lord and noble Baroness have maybe been reading too much in the
papers, but their questions were fair.
I say at the outset that conditionality supported by sanctions
has been a long-standing feature of benefit entitlement and a
policy of past Governments, including past Labour Governments.
Claimants on work-related benefits are generally expected to take
responsibility for meeting the conditionality requirements that
they have agreed to with their work coach. Where a claimant fails
to attend a mandatory appointment or fails to comply with
specific work-related activities without good reason, an
open-ended sanction is applied. Open-ended sanctions are applied
from the date of the failure up until the date that the claimant
complies with the agreed requirement—I will say more about this
later. I am grateful to the noble Baroness, Lady Sherlock, for
her general acknowledgment of this policy.
The right reverend Prelate the understandably asked about
continued disengagement and whether the policies we are taking
forward are a bit harsh—I think that is the general principle of
what she said. Perhaps I can be helpful by saying that claimants
are set mandatory work-related requirements based on the benefit
regime that they are in. All mandatory requirements are tailored
to the claimant’s circumstances and are discussed with them
beforehand, as are the consequences of failing to comply. We have
also hugely increased the training that job coaches have. I
reassure the House that the quality of job coaches is increasing
the whole time, and there is a great deal of sensitivity
involved, as the House will imagine.
Following a failure to comply, the claimant has the opportunity
to provide good reason. Additionally, a pre-referral quality
check is in place to check for known vulnerabilities before a
sanction referral is made. Following a referral, cases are
reviewed to ensure that the mandatory requirement was fairly set
in the first place and to check whether a conditionality easement
should have been applied. Claimants will be contacted through the
normal channels from the point of sanction decision. These
include a digital nudge at six weeks following the decision.
Where a claimant remains disengaged following an open-ended
sanction, they will receive a notification at month five that
will inform them of the claimant closure intention and prompt
them to re-engage or to inform us of any new circumstances that
may impact this.
The right reverend Prelate asked, reasonably, about the cost of
living. We remain very aware of the pressures that people are
facing with the cost of living. That is why we have provided £94
billion of support across last year and this year, 2023-24, to
help households and individuals with the rising cost of bills. In
addition, subject to parliamentary approval, working-age benefits
will rise by 6.7% from April 2024, in line with inflation. The
House is well aware of the Autumn Statement announcement on the
local housing allowance rates, which I know will make a
considerable difference.
The right reverend Prelate asked about statutory sick pay. There
is a very short answer: we will absolutely continue to keep it
under review. She also asked about primary legislation and
timing. Although I cannot give her any precise information on the
timing, I can say that it is very unlikely that we will be able
to bring this forward during this Parliament. That helps perhaps
to answer a question from the noble Lord, .
Turning to the issue of disengagement, I should explain that for
the quarter ending August 2023, 95.3% of sanctions were for
universal credit claimants failing to attend a mandatory
appointment with their work coach, as opposed to refusing a job
interview. These sanctions are typically open-ended, as mentioned
earlier, meaning that they can easily be ended at any time by the
claimant re-engaging with their work coach. We know that the
majority of people who have open-ended sanctions do re-engage
with the support on offer within six months. However, there is
still a growing number who are choosing not to engage with
employment support, despite support being available to them.
It is important to place this area in the context of the
Government’s wider Back to Work plan. A key part of this is about
ensuring that a short spell out of work does not turn into a
period of longer-term unemployment. I am sure that we all agree
with that, because the longer someone remains unemployed, the
harder it is for them to return to the labour market. This can
have detrimental impacts on the individual, as well as the wider
economy. That is why, as part of our plan, we are bringing in
much more intensive back to work support earlier on in someone’s
claim. This includes upskilling, job search support, practical
work experience and tailored advice to support claimants. Those
claimants who remain unemployed after 18 months of intensive
support will undergo a review by a work coach and will be
expected to either take up a job or mandatory work placement, or
engage in a programme of intensive activity.
To ensure fairness to the taxpayer, it is right that there are
consequences for those who refuse to engage with the support on
offer. It comes back to my initial comments at the beginning of
my remarks. As a result of this new approach, no claimant should
reach 18 months of unemployment in receipt of their full benefits
if they have not taken every reasonable step to comply with
jobcentre support. The noble Baroness, Lady Bennett of Manor
Castle, asked about the additional jobcentre support—the AJS. She
asked whether this was even proven to work. Perhaps I can
reassure her that there is good evidence to show that work is
generally good for physical and mental health and well-being,
whereas worklessness is associated with poorer physical and
mental health and well-being. Work can be therapeutic and can
reverse the adverse health effects of unemployment. This is why
the AJS aims to support those closest to the labour market to
return to work as quickly as possible and prevent long-term
unemployment. So we do think this is a very worthwhile project.
It will send a clear message to claimants who can work about
engaging properly with support.
Having covered that area, I will now focus on the important
points that were raised about claim closure. I would like to, I
hope, give some reassurance, and dispel a few myths which were
put about. I listened carefully to the remarks made by the noble
Lord, Lord Davies, whom I have much respect for. However, I am
afraid that I just did not agree with much of what he said in
this respect. It is important to underline that not everyone who
fails to meet with their work coach is subject to a sanction. If
you have good reason, you will not be sanctioned, nor will your
claim be closed. The examples of “acceptable good reasons”
include new or worsening illnesses, health condition flare-ups
and periods of mental ill-health—which answers a question raised
by another noble Lord. They also include working or attending an
interview, unexpected childcare, attending the funeral of a close
family member or friend, or transport failures.
Even if there is no evidence of good reason, work coaches can
also apply discretionary easements, as mentioned earlier, such as
domestic emergencies. When an easement is in place, we relax our
requirements so that individuals will not be sanctioned, nor will
the claim be closed. Still, if you do not have a good reason for
a failure but you take corrective action and re-engage with the
support on offer within six months, your sanction will end and
your claim will not be closed.
The noble Baroness, Lady Sherlock, asked who these people were,
and I hope I can help to answer that. There is a rapidly growing
group of disengaged claimants, as the right reverend Prelate
acknowledged, on nil award, who have had a failure without good
reason and have failed to re-engage for more than six months.
They have no housing or child elements attached to their claim.
Crucially, this means that claimants who do have housing costs or
children can rest assured that they will not be at risk of losing
the income that they have come to depend on.
In addition, the people in the impacted group have not declared
that they are homeless or, because they have no housing element,
they are likely living with family, possibly including their
parents, or their friends. We also exclude any claimant with a
health condition that impedes their ability to look for or carry
out work—which might play into the questions raised by the noble
Baroness, Lady Bennett. It is therefore only right that we close
the loophole that allows people to continue to maintain a claim
without complying with any commitments.
In the remaining time, I will focus particularly on free
prescriptions. This was another theme raised by the right
reverend Prelate. Not everyone who is subject to a claim closure
will lose access to free prescriptions. There is a variety of
exemption criteria beyond receiving universal credit that would
qualify an individual for free prescriptions. Claimants are
entitled to help with health costs, including free prescriptions,
only if they are in receipt of a monetary award of universal
credit that is above zero and if their earnings in their last
assessment period were below the income thresholds. Many will
have stopped receiving access to free prescriptions when their
claims were fully reduced by the sanction.
As always, if entitlement to other benefits is reliant solely on
a universal credit claim to establish eligibility, that
eligibility will cease if the claim is closed. By excluding the
claimants who have more severe health conditions and
vulnerabilities from sanctions, we believe that the claim closure
group would likely be claiming prescriptions for only minor
health conditions. I think the right reverend Prelate
acknowledged this in her remarks.
There were a number of questions, particularly from the noble
Lord, , pressing me on the
lack of support for the most vulnerable. I hope I can be a bit
more helpful. A well-established system of hardship payments is
available as a safeguard if a claimant demonstrates that they
cannot meet their immediate and most essential needs, including
accommodation, heating, food and hygiene, as a result of their
sanction. In universal credit, claimants are able to apply for a
hardship payment from the first assessment period the sanction
reduction is applied.
The noble Lord, Lord Davies, asked about work being the best
route out of poverty. He knows what my reply will be, which is
that the Government are committed to a sustainable long-term
approach to tackling poverty and supporting people on lower
incomes. He is well aware of the expenditure that the Government
are making in this area and we believe that the best route out of
poverty is through work. The Government remain committed to a
sustainable, long-term approach in this respect.
The noble Baroness, Lady Bennett, asked about abolishing the
prescription charge. I say very briefly that the Government have
no plans to abolish the prescription charge in England or to
review the medical exemption qualifying list. Our policy remains
to help those whose need is greatest through the rules we
currently have in place.
I really ought to finish. There are a number of questions that I
will most certainly answer—
(Lab)
I am sure that the Minister will write, but I will ask one simple
question before we are timed out: how many people could be
affected by this policy?
(Con)
I have asked about that figure. I will need to check whether I
can give it to the noble Baroness, as it is not in the public
domain. It is substantial. I will write to her to give her
whatever answer I can. It is a very fair question, which was also
raised by the right reverend Prelate the . However, that is as far
as I am able to go.
(GP)
Could the noble Viscount put that in the Library and share it
with everyone in this debate?
(Con)
I will most certainly do that.
I will conclude briefly, because time has run out. I have not had
a chance to focus on safeguards, which the noble Baroness, Lady
Sherlock, raised. I will write to her on that as there is quite a
lot to say. I close by saying that our Back to Work plan is about
putting fairness at the heart of our welfare system: fairness for
claimants who play by the rules and try their best, and fairness
for taxpayers who contribute to the welfare system. Above all, it
is about helping those who can work to move into jobs, which will
grow our economy, change lives and, indeed, change their own
lives.
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