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Impact of Universal Credit Dr Phil Agulnik Entitledto 4 th October 2012

The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

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Page 1: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Impact of Universal Credit

Dr Phil Agulnik

Entitledto

4th October 2012

Page 2: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

• An economist specialising in social security • Before Entitledto I worked for DWP and

other central govt. departments• Entitledto supply a free public benefits

calculator performing over 2 million calculations a year

• We provide a range of benefit calculators for local authorities, including self-service, adviser, and under occupation calculators

• Entitledto are an IRRV strategic partner

I am…

Page 3: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

What the Government says about Universal Credit“Universal Credit is the Government’s key reform to tackle the two key problems of poor work incentives; and complexity. It will enable the system to help people to move into and progress in work, while supporting the most vulnerable. It will be simple to understand and administer and it will protect both the welfare of those most in need and the public purse”

Page 4: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

The scope of Universal Credit In scope Income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance Income-related Employment and Support Allowance Income Support (including Support for Mortgage Interest) Child Tax Credit Working Tax Credit Housing Benefit

Out of scope Council Tax support Disability Living Allowance Contributory Benefits State pension Child Benefit Pension Credit Carer’s Allowance

Page 5: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Structure of Universal Credit

Page 6: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

The Means Test

Step 1 - Calculate Maximum Amount

Step 2 - Assess Capital, Unearned Income and Earned Income

Step 3 - Taper reduces Maximum Amount

- apply disregards - 65p in the £ taper on earned income - £ for £ taper on unearned income

Step 4 - Adjustments - sanctions - benefits cap - transitional protection (for some)

Page 7: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Maximum AmountStandard Amount for single/couple plus• Child Element• Disabled Child Additions

• Childcare Element • Carer Element • Limited Capability for Work or Limited

Capability for Work-Related Activity Element

• Housing ElementRent restriction through under-occupation

rulesRent restriction through LHA rulesMortgage interest restrictions (or loan?)Non-dependant deduction(s)No housing element for supported/exempt

accommodation

 

Page 8: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Income and capitalEmployed earnings - actual income during assessment period - real time earnings from HMRC

Self-employed earnings - self-reported income during assessment period - minimum income floor

Unearned income - prescribed in regulations - not prescribed = not treated as income- generally same income types disregarded as now, except for full disregard of war pension income

All above calculated as a monthly figure

Capital - no change for benefits, big change for tax credits

Page 9: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Assessing earnings – Real Time Information

Page 10: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Unearned IncomePrescribed income (taken into account) includes:

(a) Retirement pension  (b) The following benefits: 

(i) contribution-based jobseeker’s allowance; (ii) employment and support allowance; (iii) carer’s allowance; (iv) bereavement allowance; (v) widowed mother’s allowance; (vi) widowed parent’s allowance; (vii) widow’s pension; (viii) maternity allowance; (ix) foreign benefits 

(c) Spousal maintenance (d) Student income (e) Etc etc

 

Page 11: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Earnings disregards (may change)

Tax Credits

Housing Benefit

Universal Credit max disregard

Universal Credit min disregard

Universal Credit max disregard

Universal Credit min disregard

Single £6,420 £260 £700 £700 £0 £0

Couple £6,420 £520 £3,000 £1,920 £3,000 £520

Lone parent

£6,420 £1,560 £9,000 £2780 (extra £260 for child 2+)

£7,700 £2080 (extra £260 for child 2+)

Couple with children

£6,420 £520 £7,250 £2440 (extra £260 for child 2+)

£5,700 £1040 (extra £260 for child 2+)

Disabled, single or couple

£6,420 £1,040 £7,000 £2,080 £7,000 £2,080

Current system Final system Original proposal

Plus 100% of pension contributions disregarded!

Page 12: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Transitional ProtectionThree kinds of claim for UC:1. New claim, e.g. when someone

loses their job and claims benefit2. Change of circumstance (natural

migration), e.g. when an extra child is born

3. Managed migration, when DWP initiates the transfer onto UC

DWP’s claim that “no one will be worse off!” only applies to managed migration!

Transitional protection for this group means cash amount can not go down

Page 13: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Some affected groups...

Page 14: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Disabled Adults

• Current Disability Premiums will be replaced with just two elements:limited capability for work limited capability for work related activity

• Entitlement based on the Work Capability Assessment, rather than DLA/PIP assessment

• Limited Capability for Work element likely to be the same level as ESA WRAG component

• Limited Capability for Work Related Activity element is likely to be higher than ESA Support component, but lower than Severe Disability Premium (SDP). Big winners and losers!

Page 15: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Disabled Adults – other changes• No equivalent of Permitted Earnings

• Higher earned income disregard, but no equivalent of WTC disability element

• Carer Element not paid in addition to Limited Capability Elements – one or the other

Page 16: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Loss of SDP – Citizens Advice example

Page 17: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Disabled Children

• Two rates of disabled child additionsHigher rate when child awarded highest rate of DLA

(care) or is registered blindLower rate when child awarded other rates of either

component of DLA (mobility or care)

• Figures proposed to date suggest that higher rate may be same or more than current Child Tax Credit severe disability element

• But lower rate same as WRAG component, worth half of current Child Tax Credit disability element of £57 per week

• Note: DLA/PIP assessment used for children

Page 18: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

The Self-Employed

Minimum Income FloorIntended as alternative to work conditionality

for self-employedCalculated as 35 hours times minimum wageExemption during start-up period

Start-up PeriodWithin 12 months of starting self employmentUp to 12 months exemption from MIFOnce in every 5 years

Duty to report income each monthNo carry forward from previous monthPermitted reductionsFlat rate deductions for mileage/use of home

Page 19: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Couples where one person over Pension Credit age

• Under UC the age of the youngest person in a couple will determine whether they claim Pension Credit or UC

• As well as existing gap in benefit rates, working age also have under occupation rules, work conditionality etc

• As with examples above, massive difference in income between a ‘natural’ transition onto UC and managed migration

Page 20: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

DWP estimates of winners and losers (Impact Assessment Oct

2011)

Page 21: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Timetable…

Page 22: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Oct ‘13Apr ‘13 Oct ‘14 Oct ‘15 Oct ‘16 Oct ‘17

Pilot New claims from out of work customersApr ‘14Feb ‘11

Design & build

New claims from in work customers

Natural transitions due to change of circs

Managed transitions

Legacy load

JSA, ESA, IS, HB, WTC, CTC

8m6m4.5m2.5m

UC load

Implementation Timescale

Page 23: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Pathfinders and LA led Pilots• Pathfinders in Oldham, Tameside,

Warrington and Wigan start April 2013. Live UC claims from new JSA claimants

• Pilots to test aspects of delivery (online, monthly payment, rent to claimant not landlord) from now....

Bath and North East Somerset CouncilBirmingham CC Caerphilly County BCDumfries and Galloway CouncilLB LewishamMelton and Rushcliffe BC as partnership

Newport CCNorth Dorset DCNorth Lanarkshire CouncilOxford CCWest Dunbartonshire CouncilWest Lindsey DC

Page 24: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Conclusion: Winners and Losers • One year to go! But draft UC regs not

complete and further draft regs this month. Entitlement rates and disregards in December (presumably)

• Modelling winners and losers at the moment requires guess work as to rates and rules

• Winners have an incentive to transfer to UC via a change of circumstance. In line with policy intention to encourage 1-16 hours work

• Losers have an incentive to be part of managed migration and get transitional protection

Page 25: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

Conclusion: Impact on LAs • Difficult to estimate run down in HB caseload

due to switching incentive for UC winners

• Council Tax Support schemes re-designed from April 2014 to align rules (e.g. on self-employed)

• Council Tax Support schemes may need to split working age claimants into those claiming UC and those not

• April 2013 changes mean a big cohort of losers. In contrast UC losers are protected

• ‘Can’t pay’ rather than ‘won’t pay’ may be biggest problem for new Council Tax Support schemes

Page 26: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented

My contact details:

Email: [email protected]: 07816 638590Web: www.counciltaxsupport.comOr

www.solutions.entitledto.co.uk

Page 27: The impact of universal credit phil agulnik 4th october 2012 as presented