Reblogged from Vox Political:
The long-feared roll-out of the benefit cap happened today. There has
been a great deal of shouting about it from all sides, but it is possible to get
a balanced view – by linking news articles from opposing sources such as, say,
New Statesman, the BBC and the Daily Mail.
Yes, the Daily Mail. I’m serious.
The benefit cap is one of the Coalition’s most popular policies – not the
ONLY popular policy; believe it or not, a sizeable proportion
of the population think Cameron and Co are doing a good job. New
Statesman quotes a YouGov poll in which 79 per cent of people, including 71
per cent of Labour voters, support the cap – with just 12 per cent opposed. The
Mail quotes Ipsos Mori, whose poll states 74 per cent support the cap.
We’ll start with the Statesman, which
gives us the facts that Iain Duncan Smith – architect of the policy – won’t
want people to know:
“1. An out-of-work family is never better off than an in-work family
“The claim on which the policy rests – that a non-working family can
be better off than a working one – is a myth since it takes no account
of the benefits that an in-work family can claim to increase their income. For
instance, a couple with four children earning £26,000 after tax and with rent
and council tax liabilities of £400 a week is entitled to around £15,000 a year
in housing benefit and council tax support, £3,146 in child benefit and more
than £4,000 in tax credits.
“Were the cap based on the average income (as opposed to average earnings) of
a working family, it would be set at a significantly higher level of £31,500.
The suggestion that the welfare system “rewards” worklessness isn’t true;
families are already better off in employment. Thus, the two central arguments
for the policy – that it will improve work incentives and end the “unfairness”
of out-of-work families receiving more than their in-work equivalents – fall
down.
“Contrary to ministers’ rhetoric, the cap will hit in-work as well as
out-of-work families. A single person must be working at least 16 hours
a week and a couple at least 24 hours a week (with one member working at least
16 hours) to avoid the cap.
“2. It will punish large families and increase child poverty
The cap applies regardless of family size, breaking the link between
need and benefits. As a result, most out-of-work families with four
children and all those with five or more will be pushed into poverty (defined as
having an income below 60 per cent of the median income for families of a
similar size). Duncan Smith has claimed that “at £26,000 a year it’s very
difficult to believe that families will be plunged into poverty” but his
own department’s figures show that the poverty threshold for a non-working
family with four children, at least two of whom are over 14, is £26,566 – £566
above the cap. The government’s Impact Assessment found that 52 per
cent of those families affected have four or more children.
“By applying the policy retrospectively, the government has chosen to
penalise families for having children on the reasonable assumption that existing
levels of support would be maintained. While a childless couple who
have never worked will be able to claim benefits as before (provided they do not
exceed the cap), a large family that falls on hard times will now suffer a
dramatic loss of income. It was this that led the House of Lords to vote in
favour of an amendment by Church of England bishops to exclude child benefit
from the cap (which would halve the number of families affected) but the defeat
was subsequently overturned by the government in the Commons.
“The DWP has released no official estimate of the likely increase in child
poverty but a leaked government analysis suggested around 100,000 would
fall below the threshold once the cap is introduced.
“3. It will likely cost more than it saves
“For all the political attention devoted to it, the cap is expected to save
just £110m a year, barely a rounding error in the £201bn benefits bill. But
even these savings could be wiped out due to the cost to local
authorities of homelessness and housing families in temporary
accommodation. As a leaked letter from Eric Pickles’s office to David
Cameron stated, the measure “does not take account of the additional costs to
local authorities (through homelessness and temporary accommodation). In fact we
think it is likely that the policy as it stands will generate a net cost.
In addition Local Authorities will have to calculate and administer
reduced Housing Benefit to keep within the cap and this will mean both demands
on resource and difficult handling locally.”
“4. It will increase homelessness and do nothing to address the housing
crisis
“Most of those who fall foul of the cap do so because of the amount they
receive in housing benefit (or, more accurately, landlord
subsidy) in order to pay their rent. At £23.8bn, the housing benefit
bill, which now accounts for more than a tenth of the welfare budget, is far too
high but rather than tackling the root of the problem by building more
affordable housing, the government has chosen to punish families unable to
afford reasonable accommodation without state support.
“The cap will increase homelessness by 40,000 and force councils to relocate
families hundreds of miles away, disrupting their children’s education
and reducing employment opportunities (by requiring them to live in an
area where they have no history of working).
“5. It will encourage family break-up
“Duncan Smith talks passionately of his desire to reduce family
breakdown but the cap will serve to encourage it. As Simon Hughes has
pointed out, the measure creates “a financial incentive to be apart” since
parents who live separately and divide the residency of their children between
them will be able to claim up to £1,000 a week in benefits, while a couple
living together will only be able to claim £500.”
The BBC opened with a
much sunnier perspective that has caused Vox Political to send a
query to the UK Statistics Authority.
According to the report, “More than 12,000 people have moved into work after
being told about the benefits cap, the government says.” Oh,
really?
“The Department of Work and Pensions (DWP) said that 12,000 claimants have
found jobs over the last year, after being contacted by job centres,” the BBC
report went on. “The job centres warned them they might have their benefits
capped if they did not find employment.”
Didn’t Iain Duncan Smith get into trouble only a few months ago, for
reporting that 8,000 people had moved into work after being told about the
cap?
Only last week, his own officials told the Work and Pensions committee
he had ignored small print in their reports, stating clearly
that he could not use the figures to claim that any “behavioural change” had
taken place.
Vox‘s
article last week quoted Dame Anne Begg, who asked: “So no-one checking the
written articles from the Secretary of State – from the statisticians’ point of
view – actually said ‘Secretary of State – if you look at the little footnote…
It says that you cannot interpret that these people have gone into work as a
result of these statistics’. Nobody pointed that out?“
John Shield, Director of Communications at the DWP, responded: “In this
instance it did involve the press office. I’m just trying to be clear that not
everything that comes out of the department will go through us – particularly
when there are political ends.”
In other words, the Secretary of State ignored his advisors to make a
political point that had no basis in fact. He lied to the
public.
How do we know he isn’t doing it again?
A letter to Mr Dilnot is in order, I think.
Finally, to the Daily Mail, where
it was reported that “Cabinet minister Iain Duncan Smith today accused the
BBC of launching a ‘politically-motivated’ attack on government plans to cap
benefits at £26,000.
“The Work and Pensions Secretary accused the Corporation of using ‘lots of
little cases’ to claim that limiting welfare payments would not get people back
to work.”
Unfortunately for Mr… Smith, his story unravelled further down the piece,
when it was revealed that he told the nation that HIS evidence is right because
it’s from people working in Jobcentres: “This is advisers, they talk to me… I
talk to people actually in the Jobcentres.”
That’s anecdotal, and may not be used to suggest a national
trend. He is using lots of little cases to claim that his cap will
work.
So we go from the cold, hard facts, to the comforting fantasy, to the
shattering of the Secretary-in-a-State’s temper on national radio when the flaws
in his scheme were exposed.
Mail readers, in that paper’s ‘comment’ column, seem to have
supported his viewpoint – despite the facts.
Will their opinions change when the horror stories start appearing –
or will they stick their fingers in their ears and scream, “La la la I’m not
listeniiiiiing!” – as Mr… Smith did (figuratively speaking) on the Today
programme?