£1.5bn Universal Credit Reforms ‘Offer More Support’ Than Reducing Waiting Time

£1.5bn Universal Credit Reforms ‘Offer More Support’ Than Reducing Waiting Time

A £1.5 billion package to reform Universal Credit will offer “significantly more support” than reducing the standard waiting time for payments to one month, the Work and Pensions Secretary has said.

David Gauke made the comments as he outlined further details of changes to advance payments, housing benefit and axing a seven-day waiting period for the flagship welfare reform.

Labour said the changes were not enough and “must be brought forward, amended and added to”.

In Wednesday’s Budget Chancellor Philip Hammond announced the series of reforms to Universal Credit (UC), after pressure from Tory backbenchers and growing evidence about problems with its rollout.

Making a statement in the Commons, Mr Gauke said: “This is a comprehensive and wide-ranging package worth £1.5 billion, offering significantly more support than a simple reduction of the wait for the first payment to one month.”

There had been growing pressure for the Government to reduce the standing waiting time for the first UC payment from six weeks to a month, over fears claimants were getting into debt.

Debbie Abrahams, the shadow work and pensions secretary, said: “These measures for UC are not enough. They must be brought forward, amended and added to.”

Mr Gauke told MPs that from January, the period of time over which an advance is repaid will increase from six to 12 months.

He said claimants will be able to receive up to 100% of their estimated entitlement as an advance payment, rather than the existing 50%.

“In practice, this means that new claimants in December can already receive an advance of up to 50% of their estimated overall entitlement, and may receive a second advance to take it up to 100% in the new year,” said Mr Gauke.

He also told the Commons that from the spring, claimants will be able to apply online for an advance, while the seven-day waiting period will be abolished from February.

From April, new claimants already receiving help with housing costs will get an additional payment of two weeks housing benefit as they move over to Universal Credit, he said.

Other changes announced by the Work and Pensions Secretary include local authorities being able to recoup more than 80% of the money they spend on temporary accommodation directly from the Government rather than from claimants.

He also announced an extended partnership working with Citizens Advice to provide more face-to-face support to Universal Credit claimants.

Tory former work and pensions secretary Iain Duncan Smith congratulated Mr Gauke for securing “nearly £1.5 billion to help in the process”.

He told MPs: “The whole rollout of Universal Credit was set deliberately like this so that they could respond to any needs and problems that existed and make the changes that were necessary.”

But Ms Abrahams said the changes would do nothing to help tens of thousands of people waiting for the benefit before Christmas, and voiced concerns that only a week had been removed from the waiting period.

She added: “It is contrary to the ambitions of UC that instead of alleviating poverty, it is going to cause it, let alone an insult to ask people who are not able to make ends meet under the Government’s punitive reforms to bear even more risk, stress and concern.”

Mr Gauke called Labour “a roadblock to welfare reform”.