The Government must urgently reassess its sanctions regime against people with a disability or health conditions,

A report out today from the House of Commons says that it does not work and that worse,it is harmful and counterproductive.

The committee concludes that the human cost of continuing to apply the existing regime of benefit sanctions ,the “only major welfare reform this decade to have never been evaluated”,appears simply too high.

The evidence that it is achieving its aims is at best mixed, and at worst showing a policy that appears “arbitrarily punitive” say MP’s.

The Committee says the Coalition Government “had little or no understanding of the likely impact of a tougher sanctions regime” when it introduced it in 2012 with the stated aim, as the National Audit Office describes it, that “benefits, employment support and conditions and sanctions together lead to employment.”

At that point, Government promised to review the reform’s impact and whether it was achieving its aims on an ongoing basis.  But six years later, Government “is none the wiser”. What evidence there is shows that, at best, the effectiveness of sanctions is mixed. At worst, it shows them to be counterproductive.

Single parents, care leavers and people with a disability or health condition are disproportionately vulnerable to and affected by the withdrawal of their benefit.

Until Government can show unequivocally that sanctions actually help to move these claimants into work, it cannot ‘justify these groups’ continued inclusion in the sanctions regime’.

In the meantime, and until that positive link is proven, people who are the responsible carer for a child under the age of 5, or a child with demonstrable additional needs and care costs, and care leavers under the age of 25, should only ever have a maximum of 20% of their benefit withheld.

The committee says that the Government should also “immediately stop imposing conditionality and sanctions on anyone found to have limited capability for work, or who presents a valid doctor’s note” stating they cannot work.

Instead, it should work with experts to develop a programme of voluntary employment support for those who can get into work.

Committee Chair Frank Field MP
“We have heard stories of terrible and unnecessary hardship from people who’ve been sanctioned. They were left bewildered and driven to despair at becoming, often with their children, the victims of a sanctions regime that is at times so counter-productive it just seems pointlessly cruel.
While none of them told us that there should be no benefit sanctions at all, it can only be right for the Government to take a long hard look at what is going on. If their stories were rare it would be unacceptable, but the Government has no idea how many more people out there are suffering in similar circumstances. In fact, it has kept itself in the dark about any of the impacts of the major reforms to sanctions introduced since 2012.
The time is long overdue for the Government to assess the evidence and then have the courage of its reform convictions to say, where it is right to do so, ’this policy is not achieving its aims, it is not working, and the cost is too high: We will change it.”

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