George Eaton writes:
Perhaps
no government reform has been billed as more transformative than Universal
Credit.
From the moment it was first conceived in opposition by Iain
Duncan Smith, it was said that the programme would remake the welfare
state and "improve the lives of millions of claimants by incentivising
work and making it pay".
But the more time has passed, the less plausible this
rhetoric has become.
Universal Credit's botched implementation means that
there have been just 250,000 claims to date, compared to an original target of
4.46 million by 2015-16.
But even if the reform eventually crawls to
the finishing line (at a cost of £2bn), its effect will be far from
transformative.
The potential benefits of Universal Credit were always
oversold.
From a previous level of 73p in the pound, the
typical withdrawal rate for benefit claimants would fall to 65p - a
marginal, not a revolutionary shift.
But as Frank Field, the work and
pensions select committee chair, notes in his new Civitas report, the reality is even
less impressive.
The decision to exclude council tax and free school meals from
the reform and the cuts progressively made to the work allowance (the level of
earnings exempt from withdrawal) means that the majority of claimants will lose
out under Universal Credit.
Of those low-paid workers who make a new claim and do not
receive help with housing costs, childless workers will be £866 worse off
compared with what they would have got under the current system, lone parents
will be £2,629 worse off and couples with children will be £1,084 worse off.
Of
those who receive help with housing costs, childless workers will be
£866 worse off, lone parents will be £554 worse off and couples with
children will be £234 worse off.
Field damningly concludes:
"If
creating an incentive to work is the goal the present system for the vast
majority of claimants meets that goal more effectively. Any reduction in the
marginal tax rate will only come for particular groups of Universal Credit claimants
should the benefit be introduced".
Has more time and
money ever been devoted to a reform for so little gain?
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