UK Parliament / Open data

Pensions Bill

Proceeding contribution from Lord McKenzie of Luton (Labour) in the House of Lords on Wednesday, 8 January 2014. It occurred during Debate on bills and Committee proceeding on Pensions Bill.

My Lords, this is a probing amendment to give us a chance to have a canter round the passporting issues. The impact assessment has a section on passported benefits. We had a brief excursion into these matters when we last met and have since had a helpful letter from the Minister. The impact assessment sets it out clearly:

“If pensioners are no longer eligible for Pension Credit as a result of the single-tier reforms then they could lose eligibility to some of these ‘passported benefits’”.

That is straightforward. It goes on to state:

“Receipt of Guarantee Credit passports pensioners to the full amount of Housing Benefit and Council Tax Benefit … There is little reduction in Guarantee Credit eligibility resulting from the single tier”.

Therefore, this has a limited impact on the proportion of pensioners who are eligible to be passported. Yet in his letter—and we understand the arithmetic—the Minister tells us that in 2020 there will be a fall of around 15% to 20% of the total eligible for guarantee credit in these cohorts.

Going back to the impact assessment, we are reminded that there are other benefits that are linked to receipt of guarantee credit such as health benefits and Social Fund payments, so that pensioners no longer entitled to guarantee credit as a result of the single-tier measures may also lose eligibility to these other benefits. But again we are told that,

“there is only a small impact of single tier on entitlement to Guarantee Credit”.

The cynic might conclude that, when dealing with passported benefits, the Government are seeking to play down the reduction in guarantee credit recipients but are otherwise seeking to reassure us that single tier will reduce means-testing. I accept the figures in the Minister’s letter that in the 2040s there will be some 50,000 fewer households on guarantee credit than would have been the case under the existing state pension arrangements. It is further accepted that fewer will be on guarantee credit because their income has risen. However, the working assumption is that STP will be set just marginally above the guarantee credit level, so for notionally swapping pension income for guarantee credit some 50,000 are notionally missing out on passporting. Is this correct? What are the estimated savings to government from this? There seems clearly to be no intent to compensate in any way. As our documentation makes clear, the main driver of reductions in pension credit is the demise of the savings credit. Chart 4.1 of the impact assessment shows—as a percentage of the population reaching state pension age after the introduction of single tier—the change in the composition of those eligible for pension credit, but I cannot readily locate the absolute numbers of households which lose savings credits and the notional average amounts. The chart is done in percentage terms. Can the Minister help us on this?

So far as the passporting of benefits is concerned, under current arrangements most depend on guarantee credit. However, receipt of the savings credit can unlock access to such benefits as cold weather payments, affordable warmth obligations of energy companies and, until abolition, working tax credit and child tax credit. How many pensioners will have no access to cold weather payments under STP who would have under the current arrangements? How much money are the Government saving by this, and are there plans to put in place any alternative arrangements? I beg to move.

About this proceeding contribution

Reference

750 cc411-2GC 

Session

2013-14

Chamber / Committee

House of Lords Grand Committee

Legislation

Pensions Bill 2013-14
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