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Work From Home Or Lose Benefits Says DWP

November 22, 2023

Rishi Sunak will threaten to cut benefit payments to hundreds of thousands of people with mobility and mental-health problems unless they find work they can do from home.

The prime minister will tell them to find jobs or face a benefits cut of £4,680 a year if they do not in a bid to get more people back to work, according to reports.

It comes as part of a drive to slash the government’s welfare bill, with ministers insisting that many on benefits can no longer be “written off” as incapable of working thanks to the post-Covid boom in remote working.

In September, work and pensions secretary Mel Stride launched a consultation to overhaul the government’s work capability assessments, which determine whether someone is eligible to claim universal credit instead of working.

The consultation promised to reflect “the rise of flexible and home working and better employer support for disabled people and people with health conditions”.

At the time, Mr Sunak said he wanted to “help people take advantage of modern working environments“.

The response to the consultation is set to be published alongside the government’s autumn statement on Wednesday, according to The Times.

Universal credit claimants unable to walk 50 metres unaided do not have to look for a job under “limited capability for work and work-related activity” category. But this descriptor is expected to be removed, it reported.

It will mean that from 2025, hundreds of thousands of claimants will be hit by the “carrot and stick” approach.

The chancellor Jeremy Hunt last week warned as part of a wider crackdown that those who “coast” on benefits will lose handouts if they refuse to take a job.

Claimants deemed fit to work, but who fail to take steps to find employment, will be cut off from accessing benefits such as free prescriptions and dental treatment, help from energy suppliers and cheaper mobile phone packages.

The chancellor said the move, launched just days the autumn statement, was necessary to stop “anyone choosing to coast on the hard work of taxpayers”.

But the plans were condemned as hateful by senior Tories and potentially illegal by the head of Britain’s equalities watchdog.

Former deputy prime minister Michael Heseltine told The Independent that ministers should not “use the health service as a sanction”.

Tory minister Laura Trott on Tuesday brushed off suggestions that plans to encourage people with mental health or mobility problems to work from home are uncaring.

The chief secretary to the Treasury, told Sky News: “If you can work as a principle, you should work, and that is what the government believes. That’s been the thrust of all of our policies.

“Of course, there should be support for people to help them into work or to help them with issues that they’re facing, but ultimately, there is a duty on citizens that if they are able to go out to work, that’s what they should do.”

One Comment leave one →
  1. Dan McIntyre's avatar
    November 22, 2023 10:10 am

    Worrying times. Last year I had to resign from my NHS role after a number of years and become a pensioner at the age of 45! Because my tier 2 NHS pension is small I also get UC and because the NHS occupational health doctor reported that I’m no longer capable of working in any capacity, not just the job I was doing, I’ve been placed in the limited capacity group for UC.

    Are we now going to see bureaucratic button pushers making decisions on people’s capabilities when highly skilled doctors have already examined them minutely and made a decision on what that person’s capabilities are based on their clinical findings? That would be ludicrous.

    My own GP, after that report from occupational health, gave me a “fit note” also saying that I was incapable of doing any work and when it came to the period of this she marked it as “indefinite”. When I took it to the advisor at the jobcentre she made a comment about the years she’d been working there and how she’d never seen such a thing. I just sat there in my wheelchair, with my hearing aids and my AAC device, and said “Well you have now”.

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