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Minister confirms UK Government hasn’t conducted a risk assessment into universal credit cut

10 Sep 2021 2 minute read
Photo by Toa Heftiba on Unsplash

The UK Government has admitted a risk assessment has not been carried out into the impact of scrapping the £1,000-a-year boost to universal credit next month.

The £20 per week uplift was introduced at the start of the Covid pandemic last year and removing it is predicted to have severe repercussions for some of the poorest families in Wales.

The work and pensions minister, Baroness Stedman-Scott, told the House of Lords yesterday that her department had carried out no formal assessment of the impact of returning payments to pre-pandemic level.

‘Temporary’

“The department has not completed an impact assessment of the ending of the temporary uplift, as it was introduced as a temporary measure,” she said.

“This is because we have no obligation to conduct an impact assessment as we’re returning to business as usual, as the temporary Covid uplift is expiring as it was always intended to do.”

Last month the devolved administrations wrote to the UK Government expressing “grave concerns” regarding plans to withdraw the extra money,  described by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation as the biggest overnight cut in the basic rate of social security since the creation of the modern welfare state.

Analysis of the planned cuts will impact ‘tens of thousands’ of working families, Wales TUC has warned and estimates 280,000 people will be made worse off.

The TUC’s research also suggests that more than a third (37.1 per cent) of those hit in Wales will be working families – many of them key worker households.

Latest UK Government statistics show that of the 6 million people on Universal Credit, 2.2 million are already working and 1.6 million are not required to work due to health and caring responsibilities that prevent them from seeking employment.


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Grayham Jones
2 years ago

It’s time for a new wales 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 stop being little Englanders and be proud to be welsh it’s time for a Free Wales 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

Steve Duggan
Steve Duggan
2 years ago

Cutting this twenty pound a week is cruel and unnecessary but not unusual for this UK Gov. Johnson does what he pleases, with very little opposition. We all know our only way is through independence.

Neil Anderson
Neil Anderson
2 years ago

A sovereign independent Cymru with our own currency would ensure that the hardships that many face would be quickly eliminated. Independence would allow us to roll back the egregious whims of an England that focuses on wealth and not on people.

Gareth
Gareth
2 years ago

Why would the UK Gov bother with a risk assessment, the cut in benefits does not affect them or most of their support, have the Tories every worried about the poor in the past.

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