Thursday, January 10, 2019

The UK Universal credit: Two-child benefit cap to be relaxed

Amber Rudd
Around 15,000 families with three or more children will not have their universal credit capped, the work and pensions secretary will say on Friday.
A two-child limit on the benefit came into effect in April 2017 - but did not initially apply to claimants whose children were born before that date.

This exemption was due to end next month, but Amber Rudd will say that it will instead continue.
The Child Poverty Action Group said the decision was "fantastically good news".
However, the group is still calling for the two-child cap to be scrapped for all other families.
The "child element" of universal credit varies, but is worth at least £231.67 a child per month.
Ms Rudd will say: "As it stands, from February 2019 the two child-limit will be applied to families applying for universal credit who had their children before the cap was even announced. That is not right.
"These parents made decisions about the size of the family when the previous system was the only system in place.
"So I can today announce that I am going to scrap the extension of the two-child limit on universal credit for children born before April 2017.
"All children born before that date will continue to be supported by universal credit."

What is universal credit?

Universal credit is a benefit for working-age people, replacing six benefits and merging them into one payment:
  • income support
  • income-based jobseeker's allowance
  • income-related employment and support allowance
  • housing benefit
  • child tax credit
  • working tax credit
It was designed to make claiming benefits simpler, and is being introduced in stages across the UK.
Ms Rudd was made Work and Pensions Secretary in November.
She immediately accepted there were problems with Universal Credit, and promised to "learn from errors" and "adjust" the system after taking expert guidance.
Her predecessor Esther McVey had announced changes to ensure claimants were given more time to switch to the benefit and not have to wait so long for their money.
The system had been the target of complaints it was forcing some claimants into destitution and even prostitution.


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