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Benefits cap rolled out in four London boroughs

 

Dominic Harris
Monday 15 April 2013 04:40 EDT
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Couples and single parents will receive no more than £500 a week in benefits, while the limit for single people is £350
Couples and single parents will receive no more than £500 a week in benefits, while the limit for single people is £350 (Getty Images)

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A cap on the amount of benefits people can receive begins today in a policy that is being trialled in parts of the capital.

The cap, being introduced in the four London boroughs of Croydon, Bromley, Haringey and Enfield, will see couples and single parents receive no more than £500 a week in benefits.

The limit for single people is £350, though there are some exemptions.

National implementation of the cap will begin in July, and the policy should come fully into force by the end of September.

The cap is being brought in to cut spending and to bring benefits payments into line with average income.

Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith said last week: "The benefit cap sets a clear limit for how much support the welfare state will provide - the average wage for working households.

"But it's also a strong incentive for people to move into work and even before the cap comes in we are seeing thousands of people seeking help and moving off benefits.

"We have a very clear message: we will provide support to those who need it, but the days of outrageous claims giving people incomes far above those of working families are over."

Last week the Government claimed the number of people expected to be hit by the cap had fallen from 56,000 to 40,000, with 8,000 claimants finding work through JobCentre Plus.

Mr Duncan Smith hailed the figures, saying the cap had provided a "strong incentive" for people to look for jobs, even before it had started to affect their incomes.

But Jonathan Portes, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research and a former chief economist at the Department for Work and Pensions, said there was "no evidence at all" that the cap had affected people's behaviour.

The cap was originally expected to save £275 million a year from the welfare bill.

David Lammy, MP for Tottenham, called for rent controls to protect families from rocketing rents and more council house building.

He said those affected by the cap included women working less than 16 hours a week in jobs such as being dinner ladies or cleaning.

"I have brought together 1,000 families affected in London, these are women with children, many of them are working, they are not working enough hours to be exempt and they are looking at being forced on to the streets because of this policy," he told ITV Day break.

"Yes, rents are high, yes it is a lot of taxpayers' money, but go after the landlords - do something about high rents, do something about building council houses, so that people don't have to be in private rented accommodation.

"Don't go after single mums, vulnerable people with kids and turf them on to the streets."

Employment minister Mark Hoban MP told ITV Daybreak: "We need to recognise that housing benefit doubled under the previous government.

"We need to take action to ensure that the welfare state is affordable and that it is fair and we encourage people into work.

"The reforms we are introducing today, through the benefit cap, do just that."

He said those people in work are exempt from the cap.

"What we are asking is for people to work 16 hours a week and that is the same rule that is in place for working tax credits," he said.

PA

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