MEDIA RELEASE:
Under embargo until 00.01 Monday 22 October 2012
A new report published today (22 October, 2012) exposes how the Government's welfare cuts are hitting disabled people hardest:
-
8 in 10 (85 per cent) claim losing their Disability Living Allowance (DLA) would drive them into isolation, and would leave them struggling to manage their condition (84 per cent).
-
9 in 10 (95 per cent) fear that losing DLA would be detrimental to their health.
The Hardest Hit, a coalition of over 90 disabled people's organisations and charities, produced the report 'The Tipping Point' which brings together a survey of over 4,500 disabled people, a poll of more than 350 independent welfare advisors, and more than 50 in-depth interviews with disabled people with varying conditions and impairments.
Shocking statistic
The report reveals some shocking statistics:
-
Nearly 9 in 10 (87 per cent) disabled people said their everyday living costs are significantly higher because of their condition
-
More than three quarters (78 per cent) of disabled people said their health got worse as a result of the stress caused by their Work Capability Assessment (WCA) for Employment and Support Allowance (ESA)
-
Two thirds (65 per cent) of disabled people felt that ESA assessors did not understand their condition
-
Nearly 9 in 10 (87 per cent) welfare advisors said the constant re-assessments for benefits are damaging people's health
-
9 in 10 (90 per cent) welfare advisors said that too many disabled people are slipping through the net and are left without adequate support by the welfare system.
Despite much hype about the recent Paralympic Games seemingly shifting the nation's perception of the UK's 11 million disabled people, the number of disability hate crime incidents in England and Wales is increasing dramatically and a survey reveals plummeting levels of public support for benefits for disabled people who cannot work (1).
The report highlights that disabled people are twice as likely to live in poverty and even a small loss of income can tip people with a disability into greater dependence on health and social care services or friends and family.
£9 billion worse off
It's predicted that Britain's 3.6 million people claiming disability benefits will be £9 billion worse off from 2010 to the end of this Parliament, with an estimated 500,000 disabled people expected to lose out when DLA becomes Personal Independence Payment (PIP) in April 2013(3). The Government claims it will claw back about £2.2 billion but the Hardest Hit coalition estimates the potential costs of abolishing DLA will be about £1.6 billion - meaning the savings are a mere drop in the ocean compared with the £9 billion being lost in tax evasion and avoidance (4).
Blind mum-of-three Terri Balon, 51, from Lancashire, relies on her disability benefits to survive. She said: "I get £105.90 a week from DLA to run my house but more than half of that goes on paid assistance where a carer comes round for 12 hours a week. Once they discovered a jam jar full of fly eggs where my daughters, two of whom have sight loss, hadn't resealed it properly. I would never have noticed. Can you imagine what it would have been like if I'd eaten them. I don't go out, I don't drink, I don't have money for treats. Am I supposed to not eat now if my benefits are cut?"
Universal credit
And it doesn't end there. Around 450,000 disabled households are set to lose out under the new Universal Credit (UC) system. For example, 100,000 families with disabled children stand to lose up to £28 a week(5).
The Hardest Hit coalition is calling on the Government to rule out targeting disabled people for further spending cuts in the next Budget and Comprehensive Spending Review.
The Government has some urgent decisions to make. It isn't saving the money it predicts it will by targeting disabled people; it's haemorrhaging millions and must change its approach (6). The coalition wants the Government to:
-
Learn from the mistakes it made with WCA and ensure the assessment for PIP is as fair and as clear as possible to avoid costly tribunals, more anxiety and ill health
-
Get Universal Credit (UC) right, ensuring disabled people don't lose out on vital income in the transition to UC
-
Provide a lasting solution to the crisis in social care which has endured years of chronic underfunding.
"At risk"
Jaspal Dhani, CEO of the UK Disabled People's Council (UKDPC) and co-chair of the Hardest Hit campaign, said:
"Disabled people, those with long-term conditions and their families are already at risk of hardship and face massive barriers to getting into work and education. Cuts to the support they depend upon risk pushing them into poverty, debt and isolation.
"The Chancellor has just announced a further £10 billion cut to the welfare budget. With £9 billion having already been removed from disability benefits and services in this Parliament, disabled people are already at a tipping point. The Government has some urgent choices to make, but must rule out targeting disabled people for further spending cuts in the next Budget and Comprehensive Spending Review."
Week of action
The Hardest Hit Week of Action (22-28 October 2012) will bring together disabled people, their carers, friends and family, from across the UK. Campaigners will join the TUC "Future That Works" march and rally on Saturday 20 October in London. Hardest Hit events will then take place throughout the week including a march and lobby in Newcastle, a light vigil in Sunderland, MP Question Time event in Birmingham, and stunts in London and the South east.
For more information and to join the Hardest Hit campaign visit www.hardesthit.org.uk or join us at www.facebook.com/thehardesthit or follow us at #HardestHit
-END-
Notes to Editors
For more information contact Emma Mercer, PR Officer, RNIB on 0207 391 2223.
Case studies, spokespeople and audio visual materials are available on request. A copy of the full report is available on request.
Research
The survey of 4,500 disabled people was commissioned by the Disability Benefits Consortium (DBC). The survey asked disabled people about their experiences of the benefits system and concerns about future proposed changes to the welfare system.
The survey of more than 350 independent welfare advisors was commissioned by the DBC. The survey asked advisers to consider any changes in the WCA they perceived over the last 18 months, covering the period since the first Independent Review's recommendations began to be implemented.
The anonymised in-depth interviews with more than 50 disabled people explored the ways in which people who receive DLA use it to support themselves in daily life.
Background
The Hardest Hit campaign is organised jointly by the Disability Benefits Consortium (DBC) and the UK Disabled People's Council (UKDPC).
References
1.Office for Disability Issues (ODI) 2010-11; Association of Police Officers hate crime data for 2011; British Social Attitudes, 2012 (NatCen Social Research, 17th September 2012).
2. Disability Poverty in the UK, Leonard Cheshire Disability, 2008.
3. Destination Unknown: Summer 2012, Wood, C, Demos, 2012.
4. Measuring Tax Gaps, 2011 HMRC; a full explanation about how the £1.6 billion figure is calculated can be found on page 48 in the report.
5. Disability and Universal Credit, 2012
6. For instance, the cost to the Tribunals Service of ESA appeals in 2010-11 was approximately £42.2 million (for 176,600 ESA appeals decided in 2010-11). http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201011/cmhansrd/cm110906/text/110906w0001.htm