A report by Liverpool University Department of Public Health has found that a previous government’s cut to employment and support allowance (ESA) caused a rise in poverty and mental health conditions, but had no significant effect on employment rates. The report comes just months before a similar cut to Universal Credit (UC), which is allegedly intended to boost employment rates.

The university report looks at the effects of the 2016 Welfare Reform and Work Act , which stopped additional payments for new claimants in the work-related activity group of ESA.  This meant that people who were assessed as being capable of preparing for work, as opposed to those in the support group who are deemed not to be able to work or prepare for work, received the same rate of benefit as people who were capable of work and receiving jobseeker’s allowance.  The government claimed to believe that the reduction in payments would act as an incentive to finding work.

However, the Liverpool University study discovered that the effect of the cut was that an additional 31,000 people entered severe poverty and 92,000 developed mental health conditions, meanwhile there was no evidence that claimants were more likely to obtain employment.

The authors also pointed out that the savings in welfare payments had to be set against increased costs elsewhere in the system, which may outweigh any savings.  These increased costs included the NHS, social care and local authority support.

Yet Labour have gone ahead, without any research to prove their case, with drastic cuts to the UC health element, which will mean that the majority of new claimants will receive only around half the rate of UC health that current claimants get.

When asked last week by the work and pensions committee if the DWP had modelled how many affected claimants would find jobs [Q114] , secretary of state Pat McFadden simply replied “I do not think you can say with certainty at the moment.”

In other words, no we haven’t done that.

And when asked  [Q115] “Have you modelled the impact on those who do not get jobs? Obviously, they are getting quite a lot less income.”  McFadden’s callous reply was: “For those who do not get jobs, they will get the support that they are entitled to going forward, just like anybody else in the benefit system.”

But thanks to Liverpool University, we now have evidence of the impact on those who do not get jobs, which we know will be the vast majority  – increased poverty and increased likelihood of developing new mental health conditions.

Which probably explains why the DWP have done no modelling at all.

You can download the Liverpool University report from this page

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    · 10 hours ago
    All this talk  of getting  people  into  work  is  a  farce  there are not enough jobs  for able bodied  people,  and  with  the increasing  reliance  on  Automation  and  A.I,  ther will be   even less jobs  available
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    · 12 hours ago
    Wait... so throwing people into poverty and starving them doesn't create jobs!?  Wow what a surprise lol. 

    Let's be honest - the government don't care at all about our wellbeing, they'd be happy if we all just dropped dead as it'd save them money.  That's the sad reality of the situation. 
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    · 15 hours ago
    It's a complete disaster for people with long term fluctuating conditions. People who have built their lives around working when they're able and getting a certain level of support when they're not, because next time that support won't be there. It also means that anyone who wants to try work will have only a couple of months to decide if they can continue forever because again, if they leave it too long they will lose vital support if they can't maintain it. They bang on endlessly about trapping people on benefits but this will do exactly that! It's crazy.
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    · 16 hours ago
    McFadden makes a Dalek look warm and cuddly by comparison.
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    · 17 hours ago


    In other words, no we haven’t done that."

    But, they have. And the research was referenced in the pathways to work white paper. The DWP research paper is titled "Work aspirations and support needs of health and disability customers: Interim findings". It gives figures for those on disability benefits who are in work, are not in work but believe they could start work today with support, are not in work and while they initially said they could not work when asked specifically about working from home said they could do some appropriate types of work form home. Those figures would give the top best possible outcome the DWP could dream of getting. And what do you know the vast majority whose UC health they are cutting they do not expect to get a job. The whole line McFadden and co peddle about masses of people choosing the door to life on benefits due to perverse financial incentives instead of the door to help into work, and there being vast numbers on disability taking the Mickey who are not required to look for a job or even take steps towards working who could work, is a fiction. Which along with the narrative of disability benefits being too easy to claim, overly generous, an unfair, unaffordable and unsustainable burden on hard working tax payers. Is designed to demonize and scapegoat those on disability benefits. While retaining the pretence they want to help people, that they expect to be helping them into work and better lives, not inflicting poverty and stress on the vulnerable who have done nothing wrong and cannot magic themselves work capable and magic up a employer willing to give them a job.