Early Liz Truss comments on scrapping benefits
stoke fears of further cuts
Proposals from 1995 condemning ‘recycling’ of
taxpayers’ money add to concerns for universal credit increase
Pippa
Crerar Political editor
@PippaCrerar
Fri 30 Sep
2022 06.00 BST
Liz Truss
has previously suggested universal benefits such as the state pension should be
scrapped because of the “huge expense” to taxpayers of “recycling” their money
through the system – prompting fears she could go further still with her plans
to cut back the benefits bill.
The
proposal, included in her motion to the Liberal Democrat Youth conference in
spring 1995, highlighted the “enormous – and rising – cost of pensions and
child benefit”, calling for a “search for realistic alternatives to universal
benefits”.
Truss, who
left the party the next year to join the Conservatives, had added that it was
not “socially desirable to pay out universal benefits in the current fashion”,
given the “huge expense to the taxpayers of recycling money through the tax
system”.
Child
benefit was removed for higher-rate taxpayers in 2013 but remains universal for
some families earning below the £50,000 threshold who do not qualify for
universal credit. All older people qualify for a state pension and winter fuel
benefits.
There is no
suggestion Truss plans to scrap either benefit, but her earlier views may raise
concerns, as she promised to clamp down on the benefits system during her
leadership campaign and has already announced plans to cut working age benefits
and for “efficiency savings” across all government departments.
The Lib Dem
pensions spokesperson, Wendy Chamberlain, said: “We are seeing this
government’s true colours. It’s little surprise Liz Truss is refusing to
provide help to those who need it most given she has long wanted to scrap the
state pension and child benefits.
“The Conservative
government could not be more out of touch with the British people. As inflation
sky-rockets, interest rates spiral and borrowing surges, they’d rather give tax
cuts to banks, massive corporations and billionaires than guarantee support for
struggling families and pensioners.”
A No 10
spokesperson said: “The prime minister’s views are not the same as they were 27
years ago.” However, Truss continues to argue that taxpayers’ money should not
“recycled” – or collected by the state only to be redistributed back to them.
Kwasi
Kwarteng, the chancellor, has already announced plans to cut benefits to
encourage more people into the job market, saying that this was part of the
government’s plan to “make work pay” by not allowing people to rely solely on
welfare as their main form of income.
However,
the controversial plan has provoked widespread criticism as it ignores people
who are out of work because of illness or disability, while unpaid carers,
part-time workers and single parents could be unfairly hit by benefit cuts.
Chris
Philp, the chief secretary to the Treasury, said the government had not yet
decided if it would increase benefits in line with inflation, despite Rishi
Sunak promising to do so when he was chancellor. Philp defended removing the
45p rate of income tax, despite saying it was “true” that it benefited the rich
more than the worse off.
Kwarteng,
on a visit to Darlington, said it was “premature” to confirm if benefits would
rise to match inflation. “We are talking about helping people in the round. It
is premature for me to come to a decision on that. But we are absolutely
focused on making sure that the most vulnerable in our society are protected
through what could be a challenging time,” he said.
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Meanwhile,
government departments have been asked to look for “efficiency savings” and
told they must live within the budget constraints of the current spending
review, leading to speculation of a return to austerity.
Philippa
Stroud, a Tory peer who helped create and launch universal credit, said of the
government’s refusal to confirm an inflation-matching rise: “It’s unnerving,
because obviously the previous chancellor had already committed to this
uprating. Just the fact that he’s reconsidering it, or he’s not committing to
it, makes it feel like this is genuinely up for reconsideration.”
The Joseph
Rowntree Foundation, a charity that conducts and funds research aimed at
solving poverty in the UK, said it was “shocking” that the government may not
increase benefits by inflation. Iain Porter, a senior policy adviser, said:
“Many people across the UK will agree it is morally indefensible that the prime
minister would choose to give tax cuts to the richest funded on the backs of
the poorest in our society.”
James
Taylor, director of strategy at the disability equality charity Scope, said:
“If the government U-turns on this promise, it would be devastating and lead to
disabled people starving and freezing in their own homes. Refusing to increase
benefits in line with the true inflation rate would show an utter disdain
towards people who need this support.”
Alison
Garnham, chief executive of Child Poverty Action Group, said: “Children are
already going hungry as costs soar. Unless benefits are uprated to match
inflation, they will also become the casualties of a collapsing economy.
Struggling families will not forgive a chancellor who comes to them for efficiency
savings when their cupboards are already bare.”
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