20/02/2008

New Sanctions Regime For Benefit Cheats

A review into the way benefit claimants are sanctioned will pave the way for a more flexible, graduated system which gives advisers more ability to impose sanctions on those claimants who break the rules, Secretary of State for Work and Pensions James Purnell announced today.

Speaking at the Social Market Foundation (SMF) Mr Purnell said: "These new sanctions will tackle those people who can work and choose not to. For those who genuinely cannot work I want to look at the principle of individual budgets to see how we can give them more control over their lives."

He also announced that everyone who is long term unemployed and claiming Jobseekers' Allowance will be expected to undertake work related activity in return for their benefit.

"We are streamlining the various New Deals into a single, flexible New Deal. We will make clear that we expect all jobseekers who join this programme to do at least four weeks of full time work or work-related activity unless they find work within 12 months. This will be a minimum: we will be looking for bidders who extend this principle to those claimants who will benefit," he said.

He also set out how welfare reform must tackle poverty, in particular reaffirming the Government's commitment to abolishing child poverty by 2020.

"Poverty shrinks capability. It impairs life chances. Poverty makes life riskier than it needs to be, less pleasant than it needs to be, less fulfilling than it could be. I want to be categorical about child poverty: it will not be quietly abandoned."

Since 1997 the amount of people on the main unemployment benefit, Jobseekers' Allowance (JSA), has been halved and record numbers are in work. However James Purnell set out the importance of dealing with those pockets of worklessness that still exist, announcing plans for the long term unemployed to undertake work related activity.

(VB)

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