Universal Credit Sanctions Motion made, and Question
proposed, That this House do now adjourn.—(Craig Whittaker.) 1.01
am Jim McMahon (Oldham West and Royton) (Lab/Co-op) I
thank those Members who are staying to listen to the debate. I
realise that it is very late at night, but this is an important
issue that affects many people—far more than we would want to be
affected....Request free trial
Universal Credit Sanctions
Motion made, and Question proposed, That this House do now
adjourn.—(Craig Whittaker.)
1.01 am
-
(Oldham West and Royton)
(Lab/Co-op)
I thank those Members who are staying to listen to the
debate. I realise that it is very late at night, but this
is an important issue that affects many people—far more
than we would want to be affected. Ideally, we would not be
having the debate. We hoped that by now the Government
would have listened to the calls for the universal credit
programme to be paused so that they could learn lessons,
take stock of where we are, and fix an arrangement that
ought to be providing a decent service and simplifying the
benefits system.
After the great war, William Beveridge declared that there
were five giants on the road to reconstruction: poverty,
disease, ignorance, squalor and idleness. To tackle those
five giants, a new, radical response was needed—a response
big enough to meet head on the challenges of the day that
risked Britain’s future. Furthermore, Beveridge set a
vision for a new settlement between the rights of citizens,
the role of the Government, and the formation and
foundation of public services. It was a balance of roles
and responsibilities, rights and obligations, and an
expectation that if Britain was to succeed, there must be
investment in its foundations.
The challenges that face Britain today, although different,
are as big. Our economy is weak and reliant on low wages,
low skills and insecure employment. We might sweeten the
bitter reality by making it sound cutting-edge—by calling
it the gig economy rather than exploitation —or by affixing
power to the workers when in fact many of them are
powerless, but at its heart is a weak foundation of
exploitation and low value that fails to respect a basic
belief on which I was raised: a fair day’s wage for a fair
day’s work.
Why is this important? It is important because people
should be able to earn enough to live—not just to get by,
but to be comfortable and enjoy life: to have a nice meal,
a holiday, a reliable car, a decent, secure home and a
healthy family, and, crucially, to live in a country that
invests to ensure that the next generation does even better
than the one that went before. We should have a society in
which fairness runs through everything we do. There should
be a balanced contribution, with equal dividends for those
who pay their fair share.
-
(Bradford South)
(Lab)
Does my hon. Friend agree that the new sanctions in the
universal credit system punish the working poor, especially
low-paid workers?
-
The evidence says that—it says that working families are
worse off under universal credit, and not because of its
technocratic elements, but because the Government made a
deliberate decision to make sure the financial crisis would
be borne by those who could least afford it. They are
people who are going out to work and doing what is asked of
them but, as hard as they try, they cannot make ends meet
because the odds are stacked against them and the
Government are not on their side. That is what people in
Oldham tell me, and that is what people in Oldham feel when
they work very long hours and do not see the reward from
doing that.
-
(Strangford) (DUP)
I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman for giving way at this
late hour of the day, or this early hour of the
morning—whatever it might be.
The issues that the hon. Gentleman is describing are United
Kingdom-wide. A report from the Central England Law Centre
shows that UC sanctions are three times greater than other
sanctions. Does the hon. Gentleman agree that that is a
worrying trend that affects all constituencies throughout
the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland?
-
That is an important intervention. The Department for Work
and Pensions’ own error statistics show that the error lies
within the DWP. In 2016-17, claimant error was 1.8% and
official error was 4.9%. When claimants are doing what is
asked, the margin of error is marginal, so it is the
official errors that are sending people into severe debt
and often poverty, and, all too often, to the food bank.
-
(Airdrie and Shotts)
(SNP)
I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on securing this debate.
It is about a different aspect of UC from what we have
discussed before, which is refreshing. Does he agree that
reports produced by the likes of Oxford and Liverpool
Universities on the links between benefit sanctions and the
use of food banks prove that there is a major issue
regarding the DWP’s sanction regime forcing people into
food poverty?
-
That is what is cruel about this. The working classes are
taught that if they are willing to roll their sleeves up,
work hard and put the hours in, they can get by, and that
if they work really hard, their son or daughter will have a
better life than they had, and that legacy can be passed on
to their children. I see a lot of people in Oldham who are
doing what is asked of them and working long hours, but the
idea that they will do better than their parents, and that
their children will do better than them, is a distant
prospect. That is cruel. We are still one of the richest
countries in the world, but we are a country that is built
on very weak foundations. I fear what Brexit means for our
country because of how fragile our economy is and how
little investment has been made in the foundation of
rebuilding our economy, whether in skills, the types of
industry that will get us beyond Brexit, housing or public
services. All those things matter, and I do not see
investment being made in places where it ought to be. This
is a very sad situation.
Reflecting on my own situation, when my son was born, we
relied on working families tax credits. That helped us,
because it meant we were not just eating cheap microwave
meals or skipping meals entirely to pay the rent, but it
also meant that for the first time we were part of the
welfare state. We were always taught that we claim benefits
only when in absolutely dire need of them, not because
there is a shame necessarily attached to claiming them, but
because they are to be treasured. We were taught that we
must not abuse them, but that they are a safety net to
catch us when we need it. That is why we pay our national
insurance and that is why we value benefits.
I worked for 40 hours a week, but it still was not enough,
especially when large or unexpected bills arrived. It was a
tough lesson to me that sometimes it does not matter how
hard people work, because if they get caught in a cycle of
debt, it can be difficult to break out of that trap. It
only takes one or two minor things going wrong, such as a
household bill coming in unexpectedly, for things to become
very difficult.
The situation also showed me that sometimes the machinery
of government is not on our side. We were in debt not
because of unexpected bills, but because an error in the
calculation of our family tax credits sent us into an
overpayment situation.
-
(Stalybridge and
Hyde) (Lab/Co-op)
It has been worth staying in the Chamber for this important
debate. My constituency, like that of my hon. Friend, has
been a pathfinder for universal credit for some time. It is
those bits of absurdity that I find so hard to take.
Government errors are resulting in people being sanctioned.
I have seen people sanctioned for attending a job
interview, which they are mandated to do. They win such
cases on appeal, but that can often take two or three
weeks, and the sanction leaves them dependent on high-cost
credit or food banks to get by. They become trapped in a
spiral of despair, and I find that bit of the system
absolutely unconscionable.
-
That was my experience. We were working long hours and we
relied on tax credits to be able to pay the rent and put
food on the table. Through no fault of our own, we were
trapped in a system that put blame and responsibility on to
our shoulders, even thought the fault was eventually proven
to be that of the system. Families experience a great deal
of stress when they do not have the necessary disposable
income to satisfy all the demands that are coming in. That
is the extremely difficult experience of people who are on
universal credit.
I was in a secure job with a regular wage, and my hours
were not changing all the time. I would fear being a
universal credit claimant today if I were in insecure
employment where my hours changed from one week to the
next, where my employer would not give me certainty of
employment or, even worse, where my employer would put me
on a zero-hours or self-employed contract and I had to
declare my earnings up front just in case there was an
error further down the line. That does not strike me as a
system that has been designed to help the claimant. It
seems to have been designed to create a culture, and I
believe that it is a corrosive culture. It is not a safety
net to catch people, or a top-up benefit system that is
meant to make work pay. It is a culture that talks about
the deserving poor. It tells people that they are poor
because of their own fecklessness or laziness, or as a
matter of choice, not because they have been caught in a
cycle of debt and despair. There also seems to be a
begrudging idea of what the welfare state is meant to be.
People are told, “All right, we’ll pay you the money if we
have to, but only if we really have to.” The culture that
that creates is very dangerous for a country that has a
long history of a welfare state.
More than 1 million working families will be £2,800 worse
off under universal credit. Food banks have reported a 30%
increase in referrals in areas with full universal credit
roll-out. I want to talk about Greater Manchester, and
particularly about Oldham. I want to take this opportunity
to pay tribute to my neighbour, my hon. Friend the Member
for Oldham East and Saddleworth (Debbie Abrahams), for the
leadership that she has shown on this issue. She will know
from her constituency the depths of despair that people
reach and the problems with the system, but some of these
issues can be resolved, provided that the Government step
back and listen to these concerns and take enough time to
fix them, instead of going full steam ahead into a
programme that they know has been built to fail.
We were one of the first pilot authorities, and we now have
4,000 claimants in Oldham. There are 49,000 claimants
across Greater Manchester, nearly 20,000 of whom are in
work. We have seen delays, mistakes and IT failures, on top
of the deliberate decision by the Government to cut
payments for those claimants who need them the most. Those
things have real consequences. We have heard from Citizens
Advice, the Greater Manchester law centre, my own local
authority and directly from people working in job centres
across Greater Manchester. We have also heard from a wide
range of charities, including the Oldham food bank, which
have seen scores of people—often referred by the Department
for Work and Pensions itself—queueing for food vouchers for
the food banks, just to get a basic supply to be able to
live. My casework advisers are swamped and so are many of
the charities. We fear the roll-out to the full 322,000
legacy benefit claimants, not for ourselves, but because we
see what the scale of human suffering will be if the
Government continue to fail to heed the warnings that the
system is broken.
-
(High Peak) (Lab)
Does my hon. Friend agree that it is particularly worrying
that the sanctions regime is to be rolled out to people who
are already in work? As he says, they are often in insecure
work with varying hours, which will leave them open to
benefit sanctions for reasons beyond their control.
-
That is important, because concerns have been raised about
when people are underemployed and do not have enough hours
for a full-time week and the Government require them to
actively pursue work to make up the additional hours. They
may be only one or two hours under the threshold, but they
are still required to attend an interview. If they work for
an employer that has no flexibility and would be happy for
them to walk out the door, because there is a queue of 10
people who are willing to take the 35-hour-a-week job,
perhaps they cannot get to the appointment or perhaps the
employer will not give them the additional hours required
to satisfy the jobcentre. That is a real example of what
people are going through today.
In a recent survey, Citizens Advice found that 39% of
people had waited for more than six weeks and 11% had
waited for more than 10 weeks. We have a heard a lot about
the need for welfare to mirror work. It ought to provide a
smooth transition between employment, changing contract
terms and earnings, and significant changes in
circumstances, but at its heart it is part of the welfare
state. It is a safety net to catch people when they fall on
difficult times that helps them to keep their head above
water. It is meant to help people, not treat them as
undeserving or with suspicion and resentment. For a safety
net to work, it must be there when people fall. It should
not let people hit the ground hard and then make them wait
six or 10 weeks before help arrives. That is not the spirt
of a welfare state that people pay into through national
insurance. It is an insurance policy, but it fails to be
there when people need it. That is fundamental.
There is a contract in place between citizens and the
state. If we collectively, through our common endeavour,
pay national insurance contributions, that fund ought to be
there when we need it. The Government have failed to honour
that contract, as far as I can see, and people who pay into
that pot have the right to be disgruntled and to question
whether it is really there. I would like to believe that
that is not what the Government want, but some of the
benefits debates in the media are corrosive. We hear the
language that gets used by the Government. We are now in a
position where the Government would be happy for public
support for the welfare state to fall away completely to
give them a reason to take the axe even further.
When the banking crisis really hit, people in Oldham did
not blame the bankers or the Government; they blamed their
neighbours. They looked at the neighbour who had a slightly
nicer car than them and wondered why they could not have a
nicer car. They saw the people with their suitcases full
who were getting into a taxi to go on holiday and asked why
they could not go holiday. That is the cruelty. People on
low incomes were set against other people on low incomes,
and the Government got away with it. When bankers have not
been taken to task and corporation tax cuts have been
handed out, the axe has been taken to the welfare state
that was supposed to support people.
Thirty per cent. of people have reported making more than
10 calls to the universal credit helpline before their
application was processed, with many waiting more than 30
minutes. Up until very recently, they were also charged a
high premium. Some 57% had to borrow money while waiting
for their first payment. So far, 101 job centres covering
14% of all job centres in Great Britain operate universal
credit full service, and we fear for what the roll-out
really means. But this is more fundamental than all the
facts and figures. I talked about how we collectively pay
into the pot that should be there to support people, and I
could go into a lot of detail about the sanctioning regime
and just how unfair and inflexible it is and how it does
not take people’s lives into account.
-
(Livingston)
(SNP)
I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on the passion and
conviction with which he is speaking on this hugely
important issue at such an early hour. Does he share my
concern at the report released this morning by the Joseph
Rowntree Foundation highlighting that pensioners, children
and many families, as a result of benefits sanctions, are
falling further into poverty despite much progress having
been made? Does he also agree that, as Brexit starts to
bite and as these sanctions come into place, we are
approaching a catastrophe for those on low incomes?
-
That is absolutely the experience of people who have been
affected, including people who are far away from the job
market. The treatment of people who are in work on low
wages and in insecure employment is wrong, but we should
have a welfare state that supports people into employment,
and it just does not do that in the way we want. Universal
credit might force people into a job regardless of what the
job is and regardless of its suitability, and it does not
take into account people’s real desire to make an active
contribution and to feel that their life is going
somewhere. That is the real cruelty of the current system.
According to the DWP’s own data, Greater Manchester saw a
staggering 34,000 sanctions in the 12 months to June 2017,
with 3,420 of those sanctions in Oldham alone.
Unsurprisingly, December 2016 saw sanction rates hit their
peak at 4,200, which is hardly surprising given that the
Christmas period knocks appointments out of sync, meaning
that people might not be able to attend.
My plea, and it has been made a number of times, is that if
we believe in the foundations of a fair society, we have to
have rights and obligations, but we also have to have a
state that recognises it has a role to play. The
foundations cannot be taken for granted. When they were
brought in, they were brought in because the country was in
a state and we recognised that something dramatic had to
happen to build the type of Britain we want. The idea that
those brave decisions can be undone by a Government who
seem completely indifferent to human suffering is worrying.
More than that, the challenge our country faces as we
embark on leaving the European Union is one of the biggest
in generations. It could cause economic shock and social
shock, and we do not quite know yet what the consequences
will be. A person might think that the Government would
take this opportunity to re-establish their vision for the
type of Britain that will exist after Brexit. Core to that
has to be decent public services, a social security system
that is there when people need it and an employment system
in which we invest in industry and make sure that the next
generation has the chance, which has unfortunately been
taken away from too many, to do better, get on in life and
have a decent life living in this country.
The Government need to step up. Time is ticking.
Generations are passing by. I do not want the current
system for my children, and nobody in this House should
want it for their children or for their constituents,
either.
1.22 am
-
The Minister for Employment (Damian Hinds)
Time is a little short, but I will seek to address as much
of what the hon. Member for Oldham West and Royton (Jim
McMahon) raised as possible. I congratulate him on securing
this important debate.
I will start by going over some of the principles of why we
have conditionality and of how the system we have
specifically designed in universal credit supports
claimants in meeting conditionality. The hon. Gentleman
went over some of the history of our benefit support system
and, yes, the system is there to provide a safety net, but
it is also a well-understood and long-standing principle
that individuals must meet certain conditions to receive
certain benefits.
It is possible, of course, to argue for a system of
out-of-work support that does not have
conditionality—something like a universal basic income—but
that is not, to the best of my knowledge, the policy of the
official Opposition or of other Opposition parties in this
House. That would be a completely different debate.
Conditionality has been a long-standing feature of welfare
benefit entitlements in this country, and the scope and
scale of it has evolved over time. The introduction of
jobseeker’s allowance in 1996 intensified the monitoring of
unemployed claimants’ job seeking behaviour, and the
incoming Labour Government of 1997 adopted what was called
a work-first and work-for-all approach that embraced JSA’s
monitoring of claimants’ job search activities, backed up
by benefits sanctions in cases of non-compliance. Universal
Credit is specifically designed so that work coaches engage
with and support people early in their claim, and then
throughout, to give them advice and support, and not to
lose contact with them. With the introduction of the
claimant commitment, it is clear to claimants what is
expected of them. Through it, they commit to undertake
certain actions, such as attending interviews, applying for
jobs and apprenticeships, or going on training, in exchange
for receiving benefits.
-
(High Peak) (Lab)
Does the Minister believe it is correct that a single
parent of a 13-year-old child should have to sign up to a
claimant commitment to seek work for 35 hours a week when
they have a child to look after in the school holidays?
-
The claimant commitment is agreed between the claimant and
the work coach, and it is based on the claimant’s
particular circumstances. So where a mother is taking young
children to school and back, the time she would have
available to work and for work search would be restricted
by that. Where someone has caring responsibilities for a
spouse, parent or disabled child, that will also change the
amount of time they have available. The point is that this
is to be a tailored system that responds to and reflects
the individual’s circumstances. The individual and the work
coach between them agree what is reasonable, and the
claimant then commits to it. As I was saying, work coaches
have the flexibility to personalise the requirements—I have
pretty much covered what I was about to say in that
paragraph in responding to the hon. Lady.
Work coaches can also remove all work-related requirements
where it is not reasonable to expect claimants to be able
to comply, or suspend them temporarily, such as when
someone needs time to find a home. We are constantly
reviewing our guidance and ensuring that work coaches
understand the importance of getting the right levels of
conditionality in place, based on a claimant’s individual
circumstances. Indeed, when a work coach takes up the role
for the first time, they go through a minimum of five weeks
of classroom-based learning, after which they consolidate
that learning back in their jobcentre. This training covers
conditionality and setting appropriate commitments for the
specific circumstances of the claimant. Additionally, when
a jobcentre goes live with the universal credit full
service, existing work coaches there go through three weeks
of classroom learning, which also includes how to apply
conditionality and agree reasonable commitments. Similarly,
work coaches can refer to extensive guidance on how to
support claimants with disabilities and complex needs.
It is right that there is a system in place to encourage
claimants to meet their requirements and, as a result, move
closer to work. As such, if a claimant does not meet the
requirements they have agreed to in their claimant
commitment, they are referred to a decision maker to
determine whether a sanction is appropriate. We take a
number of steps to make sure our decisions are fair: the
decision maker invites those referred for a sanction to
explain why they failed to meet their requirements; and we
take the claimant’s individual circumstances into account,
including any health conditions or disabilities, and any
evidence of good reason, before making a decision to apply
a sanction.
Evidence from trials where there was no conditionality for
the first 13 weeks showed a significant increase in the
length of time spent on benefit. That was due mainly to
people taking longer to find work. In addition, more than
seven tenths of UC claimants said the potential for
sanctions made them more likely to look for work or take
steps to prepare for work.
A report from the OECD in 2013 also noted that the UK’s
“long tradition of activation policies to promote the
effective reintegration into employment of working age
benefit recipients helped limit the rise in unemployment,
even during the global and financial crisis”.
When a claimant disagrees with a sanction, they can ask for
the decision to be reconsidered. Following that, if
necessary, they can appeal against the decision to an
independent tribunal. Ultimately, where a sanction is
applied, it can only deduct an amount equal to the
claimant’s personal element of universal credit—that is,
their standard allowance. It does not apply to the
additional amounts they may receive in respect of having
children, to cover housing costs or to help with the costs
of disability.
We have a well-established system of hardship payments and,
in universal credit, claimants are able to apply for a
hardship payment from the time their payments are reduced
through a sanction. Nevertheless, most claimants do what is
expected of them and are not sanctioned. The latest
published statistics show that at March 2017, 6.9% of
people on universal credit had a deduction taken from their
standard allowance as a result of a sanction.
The rate in universal credit is higher than the sanction
rate for jobseeker’s allowance, but the two are not
directly comparable. In UC, if a claimant fails to attend a
work-focused interview without good reason they can be
sanctioned, whereas if a claimant on JSA fails to attend a
work-focused interview, after five days without making
contact they would have their claim terminated. In the
November statistics release, about two in every 10 adverse
sanction decisions are for failing to attend, whereas under
UC it is about seven in every 10. To repeat, it cannot be
inferred from that that more people are not attending.
Rather, it means that non-attendance is often treated
differently because UC is a very different benefit that
covers not just the individual element, but support for
children, housing costs and other elements.
Universal credit is designed to support claimants in a
holistic way, ensuring that we help claimants find or
progress in work, while ensuring that they continue to
receive help with their housing costs and other benefits.
In universal credit, we are more likely to temporarily
reduce benefit, for example where there is a complete loss
of claimant contact, while we try everything possible to
contact the individual. In jobseeker’s allowance—
1.31 am
House adjourned without Question put (Standing Order No. 9(7)).
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