Luckygirl3 writes: it was deeply flawed by the fact that so many people who are entitled to [Pension Credit] do not actually claim it
Exactly so. And that’s why in September 2024, as soon as Parliament returned from summer recess, Sunak secured a Commons vote to try to stop the change while Baroness Ros Altmann placed a fatal motion before the Lords asking peers to supports her in forcing the new government back to the drawing board. People will remember that the discussion at the time revolved around the need for a full impact assessment.
I watch that Lords debate. Impassioned speeches that fell on the deaf ears of Labour’s Baroness Sherlock.
hansard.parliament.uk/Lords/2024-09-11/debates/C31BAC4A-8D15-44F8-9C58-417E31494AB9/SocialFundWinterFuelPaymentRegulations2024
But she did say this:
We want everybody who is going to go out there who is possibly entitled to claim this to do so. Some noble Lords have speculated whether, if every single person claimed pension credit who was entitled to it and got the winter fuel payment, we would save any money. In a hypothetical world, if every single person who could get pension credit gets it and gets the winter fuel allowance, do you know what we would have done? We would have taken one of the least targeted benefits in the world and turned it into one of the best targeted benefits in the world. Let us see what happens when we get out there.
A laudable objective but we know that the barriers to claiming are still there, just as they were there in 1997/98 when Gordon Brown and Harriet Harman tried to do the same thing. A whole generation on and nothing has changed.
Now, they have been out there. Of the estimated 760,000 additional households who were said to be eligible to receive Pension Credit, and would therefore still receive the WFP, only 45,800 have made successful claims. Just 6%. That still leaves over 700,000 households literally in the cold.
www.gov.uk/government/statistics/pension-credit-applications-and-awards-february-2025/pension-credit-applications-and-awards-february-2025
Means testing is expensive. Wherever the cut of point is set, there is always a cliff edge.
When Retirement Living Standards are claiming that a single person needs to spend £31.700 a year to enjoy a moderate retirement, the £35,000 threshold that has now been set sounds reasonable. As I said before, at the £200 rate, it amounts to help of just 55p a day which will buy kWh of power, enough to switch on the oven for 30 minutes to warm a meal. It’s a token really as it has long been, just a small supplement to what is arguably the, or one of, the lowest State Pensions in Europe.
Some people are arguing that we will now be robbing Peter to pay Paul but that isn’t how public spending works or shouldn’t be. A budget is set aside for Pension Credit claims. If budgets were to be rejigged to pay WFP more widely, then Liz Kendall now has more certainty over the money that is set aside each year for Pension Credit claims that are unlikely to be made:
This from a report published October 2024:
Pension Credit
The estimates show that:
• caseload: up to 760 thousand families who were entitled to receive PC did not claim the benefit, a decrease from FYE 2022 when there were up to 870 thousand families who were entitled and did not claim the benefit
• expenditure: up to £1.5 billion of available PC went unclaimed, a decrease from the estimate of up to £2.0 billion unclaimed in FYE 2022
* on average, this amounted to around £1,900 per year (a decrease from £2,200 in FYE 2022) for each family entitled to receive PC who did not claim the benefit
www.gov.uk/government/statistics/income-related-benefits-estimates-of-take-up-financial-year-ending-2023/income-related-benefits-estimates-of-take-up-financial-year-ending-2023