Labour's plan to crack down on disability benefits will do little to curb the UK's "alarming" levels of welfare fraud, experts have warned.
Sir Keir Starmer is under growing pressure to rethink controversial proposals to restrict access to Personal Independence Payment (PIP) - worth up to £800 a month - amid claims the cuts are unfair, misdirected, and risk hurting vulnerable people.
Ministers are also pushing ahead with a sweeping new fraud bill that would allow the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) to rifle through claimants' bank accounts to check for undeclared savings or work.
But campaigners and academics say the real problem lies elsewhere - with government figures revealing the lion's share of fraud comes from Universal Credit, not PIP.
Figures for 2024-25 show £6.5 billion was lost to benefit fraud, but just £100 million of that involved PIP. By contrast, fraud linked to Universal Credit accounted for a staggering £5.2 billion.