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The DWP’s flagship policy is pushing families into spiralling debts, says charity

Nye Jones by Nye Jones
21 June 2018
in Analysis, UK
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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New analysis from Save the Children has revealed that the DWP’s flagship policy – Universal Credit – is causing childcare debt to soar.

Into the red

As Welfare Weekly reported:

Childcare support under Universal Credit scraps the help low-income families currently claim in advance for childcare bills – forcing parents to pay sky-high fees upfront. They then face waiting at least a month to be reimbursed.

Save the Children’s analysis states that the average family is overspending by £580 to fund childcare up front. And the average single mum is overspending by £780.

Furthermore, DWP research shows that half of low-income families have no savings. This means Universal Credit’s “design flaw” is pushing many claimants into the red.

Defeating the point

The government website states that:

Universal Credit will help you combine work with being a parent and makes it easier to take part-time, flexible or temporary jobs to help you gain valuable skills and avoid CV gaps.

But Save the Children’s research concludes that it is having the opposite affect:

Parents are trapped between going into debt to afford childcare and turning down work because they can’t risk household direct debits bouncing. This defeats the point of universal credit.

Childcare support should help parents find work and improve children’s chances in life. Instead of making it harder to get into work, the government must switch to providing upfront help with childcare costs.

Responding to Save the Children’s criticisms, a government spokesperson stated:

Under universal credit, working parents can claim back up to 85% of eligible childcare costs, compared to 70% of costs covered under the previous legacy system. This is the highest level of support ever. And if someone has accepted an offer of paid work, they are eligible to be paid these costs for the month prior to starting work.

But it seems there is one rule for low-income families and another for those who are more affluent. The government pays higher-income families up front through its tax-free childcare scheme – a courtesy it doesn’t seem to extend to those who are struggling.

Debt crisis

Save the Children’s research comes at a time when household debt in the UK is spiralling. Analysis by the Labour Party predicts that unsecured debt could exceed £19,000 per household by 2022.

Welfare policies should provide a safety net to stop families going under. And the fact that some are drowning because of Universal Credit shames the DWP.

Get Involved!

– Support Save the Children.

– Support DPAC and Black Triangle, campaigning for disabled people’s rights.

– Read The Canary‘s full analysis of Universal Credit.

Featured image via DPAC and UK government – Wikimedia 

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