Employment and support allowance (ESA)  claimants in the work-related activity group (WRAG) are being subjected  to a massively increased sanctions regime that deliberately targets the  most vulnerable. 
Sanctions, primarily aimed at claimants on the work  programme who have mental health conditions or learning difficulties,  have quadrupled in the course of a year, even though referrals to the  programme have fallen by 43%.
The number of sanctions rose from 1,102 a  month in December 2012 to 4,789 a month in December 2013, the most  recent date figures are available for.
The vast majority of sanctions are  imposed for failing to participate in work-related activity whilst on  the work programme, which thousands of ESA claimants are forced to join  every month in spite of overwhelming evidence that it does not improve  their chances of getting a job.
The massive rise in sanctions, however, cannot be explained by a sudden huge surge in the number of claimants in the WRAG.
In fact, the number of claimants in the  WRAG increased by just 21% between November 2012 to November 2013, from  460,160 to 558,960.
Indeed, between August and November 2013  the number of claimants in the WRAG actually fell slightly, from  562,620 to 558,960. Yet the number of claimants sanctioned in this  period shot up by a staggering 75% from 2,193 to 3,837.
Nor can the rise in sanctions be  explained by a corresponding increase in the numbers of ESA claimants  being forced onto the work programme.
In fact, the rate at which ESA claimants  get pushed onto the work programme has fallen dramatically over the  same period. 8,290 claimant were put onto the work programme in December  2012. This fell to just 4,700 in December 2013, a drop of 43%.
Yet sanctions increased fourfold.
And the main targets of those sanctions are claimants with mental health conditions or learning difficulties. Back in April we pointed out  that the proportion of this group receiving a sanction had risen from  35% of sanctioned claimants in 2009 to a massive 58% by June 2013.
That figure has now increased again to  62% in December 2013, even though claimants with these conditions make  up just 50% of the work-related activity group.
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