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50 Fami;ies earned £70 thousand in Benefits

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50 Fami;ies  earned £70 thousand in Benefits Empty 50 Fami;ies earned £70 thousand in Benefits

Post  Panda Sun 8 Dec - 8:39


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Iain Duncan Smith: 50 families earned £70k in benefits

Work and Pensions Secretary says benefits cap is making welfare system "fair" as figures show scale of welfare dependency





Iain Duncan Smith attacks 'ludicrous' system which allowed 51 families to earn equivalent of £68,000 from benefits

The Benefits cap is working, says Iain Duncan Smith, the work and pensions secretary Photo: GEOFF PUGH FOR THE TELEGRAPH








9:03PM GMT 07 Dec 2013

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More than 50 families were earning the equivalent of almost £70,000 in welfare hand-outs before the benefits cap was introduced earlier this year.


Figures show that taxpayers were paying about £2 million a year to these families, who were claiming £900 a week or more in benefits.


Iain Duncan Smith, the Work and Pensions Secretary, said it was “ludicrous” that some people were receiving almost double in benefits what “hard-working families” earned from employment.





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Under the policy, which is the centrepiece of the Coalition’s welfare reforms, households are banned from receiving benefits of more than £500 a week, or £26,000 a year. The cap at this level is the equivalent of a working income of almost £35,000 before tax is deducted.


The new limit applies to the combined income households receive from benefits including jobseekers’ allowance, housing benefit, and child benefit.


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By October this year, some 28,000 households had their benefits capped. These included over 9,000 families with more than five children.

The latest statistics from the Department for Work and Pensions showed that so far 51 families have had their payouts cut by at least £400 a week, which suggests they were receiving at least £900 in benefits. This is equal to £46,800 a year.

A working person would have to be earning about £68,000 before tax to take home that amount of money.

About 300 families had their benefits reduced by between £300 and £400 a week.

Capping the benefits paid to these 350 families alone is expected to save the taxpayer around £6million a year, the DWP said.

Mr Duncan Smith has suggested that welfare pay-outs could be limited to the first two children in a family under future welfare cuts, which economists expect to be necessary in the years ahead. The minister said the policy was “restoring common sense and fairness to the system”.

“The benefit cap has successfully addressed the ludicrous situation we were in where people were receiving far more in benefits than the ordinary hardworking family earns,” he said.

"The benefit cap sets a very fair limit on what people can expect to get from the state.

“It is not right that some families were raking in almost double the amount that the average taxpayer takes home
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Post  Panda Sun 8 Dec - 8:56


Not before time .........Aneuran Bevan's "from cradle to grave "Policy on Welfare , while laudable has proved much too costly . I also think scrapping the £6 prescription charge has left a big hole in NHS coffers. Obviously , there are patients who need more items but having worked in the NHS I have seen the waste and £6 for the first item is not untoward.
Panda
Panda
Platinum Poster
Platinum Poster

Female
Number of posts : 30555
Age : 67
Location : Wales
Warning :
50 Fami;ies  earned £70 thousand in Benefits Left_bar_bleue0 / 1000 / 10050 Fami;ies  earned £70 thousand in Benefits Right_bar_bleue

Registration date : 2010-03-27

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