Rishi Sunak sets out plan for welfare reforms to get people into work
Rishi Sunak sets out his plan for welfare reforms to get people into work – but the Prime Minister backs away from a major squeeze on benefits
- Rishi Sunak said it was a ‘national scandal’ two million people did not have a job
Rishi Sunak set the scene yesterday for major welfare reforms to get people into work – as Tory sources said he had backed away from a squeeze on benefits.
The Prime Minister said it was a ‘national scandal’ that two million people of working age did not have a job.
He hinted that tomorrow’s Autumn Statement would include a package of measures designed to drive down the number on out-of-work benefits.
However, a Tory source said ministers had dropped plans for a major squeeze on benefit payments, saying the focus would be on ‘reform, not cuts’.
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has examined whether to break with convention and raise benefits by less than the 6.7 per cent inflation figure recorded in September.
The Prime Minister said it was a ‘national scandal’ that two million people of working age did not have a job (Pictured: Rishi Sunak and Chancellor Jeremy Hunt do electrical work during a visit to a college in north London)
Under one plan, benefits would have been ‘uprated’ next year by the lower October inflation figure of 4.6 per cent, saving the Treasury around £2billion.
However, a source said that the full rise had now been deemed ‘affordable’ after better-than-expected forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility were delivered on Friday.
The state pension is also now likely to be raised in line with the triple lock – the commitment to increase state pensions by the highest out of average earnings growth, inflation or 2.5 per cent – meaning an 8.5 per cent increase.
In a major speech yesterday, Mr Sunak indicated that the Government would look for savings instead by taking measures to drive down the number of people claiming unemployment benefits.
The carrot-and-stick package will include extra support and training for those wanting a job, coupled with tougher sanctions for those who refuse to look for work, who could have their benefits stopped completely.
The Prime Minister said that getting people off welfare and into work would allow the Government to continue to provide a ‘generous safety net’ for those who cannot work. Mr Sunak said that ‘work – not welfare – is the best route out of poverty’.
He added: ‘Right now, around two million people of working age are not working at all. That is a national scandal and an enormous waste of human potential.
‘So we must do more to support those who can work to do so, and we will clamp down on welfare fraudsters because the system must be fair for the taxpayers who fund it.’
The Prime Minister said that getting people off welfare and into work would allow the Government to continue to provide a ‘generous safety net’ for those who cannot work
Treasury sources declined to comment on whether benefits would be uprated by the full 6.7 per cent or by a lower figure.
One insider said Mr Hunt ‘wants to set out all the decisions on welfare in one go, and explain why he’s doing what he’s doing’.
Meanwhile, the Treasury moved yesterday to scotch speculation that wealthy pensioners could be stripped of winter fuel payments.
In a leaked recording, Paymaster General John Glen was heard saying it was time to ‘look at’ whether it would be possible to ‘ration’ the payments, which are worth up to £600 a year.
Mr Glen, who was chief secretary to the Treasury until last week’s reshuffle, was secretly recorded speaking at a Cambridge University Conservatives event last month.
Paymaster General John Glen was heard saying it was time to ‘look at’ whether it would be possible to ‘ration’ winter fuel payments
In a leak to The Telegraph, he was heard saying that his own mother would be ‘very comfortable’ without her annual winter fuel payment.
‘I think we also need to come to terms with the fact that the triple lock is very expensive and how sustainable is that going forward in terms of pensions and all the other benefits?’ he said.
He said means-testing winter fuel payments was ‘very difficult’, but added: ‘These are the sorts of mechanics of government you’ve got to look at. Is it better if we spent more of that money on child poverty? It probably is. But these are the things we need to look at.’
But Exchequer Secretary Gareth Davies ruled out any change, saying: ‘We are not going to be touching the winter fuel allowance.’
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