UK: Universal credit could 'steamroll vulnerable into poverty'

Andy

Retired committee member
“Rolling out universal credit in its current form will steamroll vulnerable people into poverty, but the government has time to turn this around by accepting our recommendations and making it easier to apply,” said Rebecca Keating, the Salvation Army’s employment director said.

There is concern among campaigners and even the government’s own social security advisers that the government has not done enough to ensure vulnerable claimants do not fall out of the system altogether when they are transferred to universal credit in the process called managed migration, which is due to start in late autumn.

Claimants with mental health problems, learning disabilities and physical disabilities, as well as homeless people were especially at risk, it said. Some lacked computer skills, or could not access the internet because they did not own a smart phone or because there was no public computer nearby.
https://www.theguardian.com/society...amroll-vulnerable-into-poverty-salvation-army
 
People feel immune from the changes that they vote for, as if risks will never be relevent to them or their loved ones, however comfortable they feel now. Why too many people rarely see that before their own devastation, I'll never understand.

I believe that "othering" and the cognitive dissonance it requires, almost as if a person is of a different species and of "victims" in this case, explains many residual horrors we carry into this modern age. Carefully curated opportunistically, for the benefit of the curator.
 
from 30 years of dealing with the dwp if they wish to reduce the amount of benefits paid out the first thing they do is come up with a new benefit name then change the criteria for eligibility there by reducing long term cost by denying entitlement to those in receipt of the previous benefit. appealing these decisions takes a great deal of effort and time . this has twice caused significant deterioration increasing my incapacity and perversely increased my needs for more generous benefits. I won my last appeal just last week not that I feel winning is the appropriate term .net result considerable extra cost to taxpayers and a very onerous system for claimants . but hey private parasitic companies have benefitted to the tune of two and a half billion of taxpayers money . As I have said before if that considerable sum had been spent on medical research into the most disabling diseases we would have seen some advances in medical treatments that could have the happy coincidence of reducing the overall cost of the benefits system .
 
Universal credit is a 'benefits' system that pays those deemed both eligible and 'worthy' £317 every 4 weeks (about a 5th of the UK average wage) in exchange for them spending 35 hours per week spent looking for full time work. Inability to either do this, or more importantly, prove that this has been done, results in 'sanctions' - withdrawal of a state set amount of 'benefit' for weeks to months.

£317 is not enough for anyone in the UK to live off for 28 days - but that's apparently fine coz that will help and encourage people back into work. Not taking the first thing offered will result in UC being stopped, not continuing to look for work, or being able to prove you are, if you get a part time job will result in UC being stopped.

People on UC have insufficient money to live in the UK, but they ares supposed to be able to maintain an internet connection, a phone, travel both to regular manitorary appointments at jobcenters and to anywhere, and everywhere, within 35 miles (I think) of their home town, to look for work, 35 hours a week.

So having their benefit reduced by 25-100% for weeks to months, when they don't have enough to get by on to start with, and then, at least for some areas where there are literally no jobs, waste money on travel, etc. is not the most enlightened policy.

But then it's not supposed to be.
 
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