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Cutting Under-25s' Housing Benefit Will Increase Youth Homelessness

Posted: 10/10/2012 01:00

Yesterday, the Chancellor and the work and pensions secretary have revived the prospect of removing housing benefit from under-25s.

In typically divisive language, they write:

"Is it right that school leavers should be able to move directly from school to a life on housing benefit without finding a job first?"

This followed the prime minister's speech in June, where he originally floated the idea. His justification?

"There are many (claiming housing benefit) who will have a parental home and somewhere to stay - they just want more independence."

Is the prime minister correct to assume young people on housing benefit can and will be able to move back to live with their parents? I think not; and if history tells us anything, I'm on firm ground.

Before housing benefit, young people living in hotels, hostels and similar accommodation claimed Board and Lodgings Allowance.

In 1985, Thatcher's government reformed it by capping the level of allowance and then removing it after eight weeks in cities such as London for under-26s.

The parallels with Cameron's proposals are straight forward. Removal of benefit and entitlement based on age, not need. Just like the Conservatives of 2012, the Conservatives of 1985 claimed young adults would flock home to their parents.

As now, others disagreed. The Social Security Advisory Committee warned:

"We think the major problem with the proposals is the risk of creating a class of rootless young people..."

The committee continued:

"We do not believe it can be assumed that adequate alternative accommodation is open to claimants under 26 either in the public or private sector, or that permanent residence with parents or friends is an option which is realistically available."

The committee was proved right.

As a 1998 report by Crisis noted, the reforms:

"Were undoubtedly a factor in the continued rise in the level of single homelessness throughout the 1990s".

St Mungos say a key reason why people end up sleeping rough is difficult family background.

The simple fact is, whether they do not get on with their parents or whether there is no longer space at home, for some young people housing benefit is the only safeguard they have from a life on the streets. Without it, the journey from home to homelessness and onto the street can be a very slippery slope.

And yet, as bad as the situation was in the 1980s through to the 1990s, the context today is worse.

Today, the number of people sleeping rough is accelerating. In London last year, rough sleeping increased by 43%.

This has been driven to some extent by the government cutting the Supporting People budget by an estimated 11%. This, combined with the removal of the ring-fence that guaranteed this money was spent on helping vulnerable groups like rough sleepers, has led many local authorities to use that money to plug the gaps in other budgets and cut hostel provision.

At the same time, David Cameron's government is actively preventing young adults from returning to the family home.

In social housing, the bedroom tax on tenants with spare rooms seeks to force families into downsizing once their children move away to university or to find work.

In the private rented sector, we now know that many London families are moving to smaller flats in order to fit within Iain Duncan Smith's new caps on Local Housing Allowance.

Completely at odds with this latest welfare proposal, the government has created a policy framework that may force more young adults out of the family home and prevent many from returning.

In government, the prime minister and his cabinet are wedded to driving forward the same old failed Thatcherite agenda, wilfully ignoring the housing crisis at the root of so many social and economic problems.

Meanwhile, they divert attention by picking on those most affected by this crisis.

 

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01:24 AM on 11/13/2012
i think the benefit system is a joke, in the story lines it says about if the young yolk, if they haven't worked they cant get housing benefit make more jobs, build more businesses so there is jobs for folk to apply and hopefully get, and another thing what about all these druggies [junkies] get everything they want they even get there dogs paid for what about the rest of the folk on the dole we not entitled for that as well talk about special treatment. ever since that cameron came
in its been a joke tell him to give up his money, 10 downing street and what ever and try live on what all the rest of use do, paying bills, watching how you spend your money, looking for work and practically nothing out there, he wouldn't last 5 minutes without the flash car, money, 10 downing street. and another thing about the stopping of the housing benefits young folk where in hostel still
some are, on the streets again some still are and now you want to stop the housing benefit what about the young folk who are moved out of their parents home trying to make a life of their own dont
they get a say or is it yous only care about lining your own pockets, im 19 at the moment and currently desperately trying to move out of parents home, all yous are doing is throwing young folk out in the streets
04:20 PM on 10/15/2012
aarrrrggghhhh !!!! its only metal paper and binary code. just go down to any of the acronym's ie, the ecb, imf etc and disconnect their broadband and turn off the elctricity. who do we know whos owed all these trillions ? who are they ?
05:35 PM on 10/14/2012
" Is the prime minister correct to assume young people on housing benefit can and will be able to move back to live with their parents? " The author knows full well that he didnt say that. he said " SOME".
Which for me means the rest of the article simply isnt worth reading - just political propaganda.
09:44 AM on 10/11/2012
I really don't get this argument. The Tories claim that people who do the right thing (hard working tax payers) can't get housing benefit but those out of work can. This is utter nonsense. Only people with children and the homeless are obliged to be housed by law. Working people and the unemployed have no automatic right to housing but they are both entitled to housing benefit.

The reason welfare has got out of control is because child benefit is being abused by single mothers, asylum seekers, migrant workers and by anyone who wants to milk the system, they are all at it yet it is the single unemployed who get blamed for the mess, a mess made in Downing Street.
11:06 PM on 10/10/2012
Only allow British people to claim benefits, it's because we've got Abu Hamzas foreign burka clad wife holed up in a millionaire mansion in London that were having to make these cut backs, no immigrants should be allowed benefits till they've paid I to the system for 3-5 years, this is not a right wing argument, Will Hutton believes immigrants shouldn't be eligible instantly for benefits.
08:37 PM on 10/10/2012
So we are to remove the entitlement to housing benfit for anyone under 25........
Join the army and fight for your country. Then when you come out after 4 years and can only find low paid part time employment be forced to move back into the parental home that you joined the army to get away from in the first place.

Can't wait.
Tories don't ya love em.
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08:21 PM on 10/10/2012
A charity i'm familiar with has already seen a significant increase in clients with issues of homelessness over the last couple of years. Usually young people. So this targeting of the under 25s is only going to exacerbate a trend already in effect.

I think it's driven by finance related to property, forcing users of lower priced properties into higher population density environments, freeing up properties for finance to set their rotten teeth into. Those in government have an agenda of increasing the population as a toxic, cancerous means of continuing the 'growth' philosophy of economics.
03:44 PM on 10/10/2012
Having listened to the current Chancellor on several occasions now, I am increasingly concerned that some of his mathematical equations are going to leave the most marginalised people in our nation totally derailed.
The Chancellor has said he is proposing to cut housing benefit for those between 18 and 25 and they should go back home. Apart from the fact that large numbers will not have a secure family home to go back to, what about the 40,000 young people who have come through the fostering process and who are currently on 1 bedroom benefit mostly through private landlords ? It will cost the Local Authority, and therefore the tax payer more to change it than to just leave things as they are. There is also a reduction in housing benefit from 50 centiles to 30 centiles which is already creating greater poverty gaps. If we factor in the 40% reduction in housing benefit to those who are 25-34 we are heading for calamity. This method iof cuts will not achieve the end goal which is to get people back to work. It quite simply is mad mathematics, fantasy figures and we implore the Chancellor not to ‘plough on’ regardless of damage he will create.
As a national housing charity, Green Pastures Housing believe that far more consultation should be had with organisations who are picking up pieces from the poor economical situation and the austerity cuts that are taking place.
Peter Cunningham
Co-founder and CEO Green Pastures Housing
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02:35 PM on 10/10/2012
What is to be done?

In my area, some young people are provided with council housing. Two bungalows nearby have teenage lads in them. I do not know their circumstances.

Local unemployment is high but there are over one hundred Poles working on local farms. The Poles look physically fit and alert. Local lads are malnourished (either bloated or skinny).
05:24 PM on 10/10/2012
perhaps the local lads could learn something from those poles you refer to, mainly:-

a good work ethic
turn up for work every day
stay on the job until finished
accept a reasonable wage for a hard days work
do jobs that they previously felt beneath them
and so on
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07:10 PM on 10/10/2012
I think you are right. I met four Polish lads a couple of years ago before they started work. They were as skinny and as unfit as the locals. It was will-power that saw them through the first days when the work feels really hard. These four lads now look healthy and fit.
11:08 PM on 10/10/2012
We could get that work ethic simply by implementing Polands welfare system, ie. no housing benefit, which is what this article is railing against.
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Ben Wilson
Might as well laugh while you still can.
11:48 AM on 10/10/2012
When will society see that housing benefit is a searing inditement on the costs of housing. Most people I know who get housing benefitt are homes where both mum and dad work, that's right, 2 incomes are so insufficient the government has to help. It's not the wages people pay to blame, its the prices people are charged for the this basic essential. To those who earn plenty, lets point out a min wage job pays £210 a week, so you have to work 2-4 weeks just to earn your rent.
05:28 PM on 10/10/2012
If you are paying £840 a month on rent, either your house is too big or your being charged too much.
taking at the 2 week example, £420, this leaves another £420 from that parent and the same from the other parent, your not telling me a couple cant live on £1260 per month after rent taken off.
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Ben Wilson
Might as well laugh while you still can.
11:07 PM on 10/10/2012
Add on the other musts...council tax, gas, electricity and water and then perhaps insurance and transport costs to work, then the picture looks far more grim. Oh we forget food, which for a family of 3-5 even on a strict budget is another £60-90 a week. Then your aren't left with anything woth mentioning...Which is why ppl get housing benefitt, and child benefitt and tax credits; the government know it is unfair. But the damning thing of it all is that the economy isn't dependant on these wheels turning, these sectors of the economy are far from suffering, and why would they be when we have no choice but to pay their uncompetitive rates and pay them before we consider anything else? This problem effects the business man as much as the poor man.
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fandabidozi
09:40 AM on 10/10/2012
So,the people who ship their kids off to boarding school say that the rest of us will have the kids [adults] at home.?

My lad is 15 and will go to 6th form college next year.

He intends to go to Uni to study either maths or the sciences.

Will he be able to if he can't afford lodgings?
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Kevin Mcilroy
09:28 AM on 10/10/2012
Easy to knock every proposal - just how should the govt balance the books? Recent ONS figures show that 60% of households in this country are net recipients of benefit over tax paid (that includes VAT as well as payroll taxes) - the top 40% are already keeping the country going how much more should they cough up?
11:17 AM on 10/10/2012
where does VAT come into it? staple food 0 rent 0 and yes the fuel 5 05 6%? - but that was an EU mission. The labour government lied when it said VAT would not rise to 20% since this is actually an agreed EU median. I remember being a lowish paid worker and I paid a lot in tax and according to your figures would be in that top 40%. But then you dismiss out of hand pensioners. You dismiss families - these are the tax earners for you when you are a pensioner.
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Kevin Mcilroy
11:49 AM on 10/10/2012
I didn't dismiss anyone ... I'm only referring to the Office for National Statistics figures, I haven't made anything up.
10:00 AM on 10/14/2012
how about the 1.2 trillion the bankers have cost us, that would be a nice start. you could follow up with the billions in foreign aid the government give away every year. what about making do with last years nukes instead of spending billions on ever more expensive ineffective ways to destroy the planet. we could stop throwing billions to the charlatans of the eu.why not renationalise the utilities and stop paying ceo's and shareholders obscene ammounts. We could stop the 200,000 immigrant free for all every year but then we,ed be an ist or an ism. or maybe kevin why not introduce a rent cap ! that way your "top 40%" of greedy landlords wouldn't be giving with one hand(after the latest tax cut that is) whilst complaining about the feckless and taking with the other hand the obscene ammount of rent they can get away with charging. It must be a coincidence but it seems everything i've touched on here involves money been wasted by you top forty % an inconvenient truth ? mmm
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Kevin Mcilroy
12:33 PM on 10/15/2012
Fair points but none of them are anything to do with me
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OC Surfer
A second is 30 nanoyears.
02:53 AM on 10/10/2012
Socialists have destroyed Britain. It's become a dingy, gray island of soul-sucking decay.
08:29 AM on 10/10/2012
Socialists have destroyed Britain? It had nothing to do with the greedy bankers that played roulette, lost and then needed bailing out because they were 'too big to fail'? The soul sucking is coming from those who say 'I've got millions in the bank, I take three foreign vacations a year and I send my kids to private schools, and I owe this country NOTHING!' The people who have massive wealth who use it to avoid paying their tax as everyone of the non-rich have too. Who claim that giving an unemployed person £55 a week to live on is too much. A society is judged by how we treat the most vulnerable, those most at risk. This government, just like the Thatcher government it resembles, kicks them, again and again and again. That is where the decay is, that is what shames Conservatives and their lickspittle Lib-Dems allies.
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fandabidozi
09:41 AM on 10/10/2012
Hear hear
12:24 PM on 10/10/2012
firstly tax should be at a uniform percentage. why should the rich pay a bigger percentage of their income than you. secondly, it was not greedy bankers, but an inept socialist government that you voted for, that removed banking regulations which caused the demise of HBOS, Northern Rock and RBS. the problems we experience today arose because of socialist spending. GB killed private pensions. Then the only thing keeping the economy together was retail sales. How was this paid for? individuals borrowed money against their houses > we had a collective debt greater than africa
i warned gordon browns office that the banks were running out of cash and he did nothing> not casino banking pls blame all the politicians
09:14 AM on 10/10/2012
Both Labour & Conservatives have made awful errors in leadership over the past 2 decades. The only difference is Labour made errors because it was incompetent, Conservatives make errors because they're elitist & cruel. I know which one i'd rather vote for.
10:43 AM on 10/10/2012
And cancelling the west coast train-line contract wasn't incompetent? Putting us into a double-dip recession shows us that they have an economic policy that's working? Net borrowing is up, and taxes for the richest are down and you seriously think this shower are competent? How does the removal of workers rights make them competent, or demonising the young, the unemployed and the disabled make them better equipped to run a government? Announcing massive cuts to the armed forces while we're in the middle of a conflict is competence? If it wasn't so messed up it would be funny.