No 10 disputes figures showing benefit cuts to push 150,000 more into poverty – UK politics live | Politics

No 10 disputes figures showing benefit cuts to push 150,000 more into poverty – UK politics live | Politics

No 10 says latest DWP figures on poverty impact of benefit cuts don’t ‘reflect full picture’

At the Downing Street lobby briefing the No 10 spokesperson said that the DWP poverty modelling released earlier (see 12.15pm and 12.31pm) does

Asked if the government was happy about the assessment that an extra 150,000 people would be pushed into poverty, the No 10 spokesperson said

The poverty modelling shows the effect of these measures on povery in isolation in 2029/30. It doesn’t reflect the full picture.

As always, poverty modelling is subject to uncertainty, and I think you have to look at the record levels of investment in the health and care system £29bn pounds more day to day funding in real terms than in 23/24 to help people get the treatment they need on time to return to work. We’ve delivered 4.2m more appointments since entering office, and we’re investing an additional £1bn pounds a year by the end of the decade to help people with disabilities and long-term health conditions into jobs. And that support will directly help people move into work and become financially independent.

In March, when Liz Kendall, the work and pensions secretary, announced the original benefit cuts, she said that they would be implemented alongside an extra £1bn being being spent on employment support.

As one of the concessions to Labour rebels, this money is being spent more quickly than originally planned. In its news release overnight the DWP said:

£300m will be brought forward over the next three years, increasing total employment support by £2.2bn over four years – upholding our commitment to spend £1 billion per year by the end of the decade.

But the DWP has not given details of what £300m being “brought forward” actually means – ie what the original timetable for spending the £1bn was, and what it is now.

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In a post on Bluesky Tom Pollard, head of social policy at the New Economics Foundation thinktank, says that the DWP’s estimate that its welfare cuts will push an extra 150,000 people into poverty is an underestimate – because the DWP is taking credit for not implementing changes to the health element of universal credit that were proposed by the last Tory government but that were, in practice, unlikely to be implemented. He says:

The updated poverty impact assessment for the disability benefits cuts once again offsets the impact of not proceeding with the previous government’s proposed changes to the WCA

The impact of actual changes happening in the real world is likely to be closer to 250k people pushed into poverty

Pollard explained this in more detail in a post for the NEF website published in March, when the original impact assessment was released.

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