The Telegraph, November 6, Sir Iain Duncan Smith MP
The post-pandemic economic upheaval should not obscure a decade of hard-won progress on welfare reform.
Prior to the reforms I introduced, as Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, millions of people were trapped on out-of-work benefits – a million for a decade or more. Unemployment had risen by half a million and almost one in five households did not have a single person in work.
Even before the financial crisis, millions were left to languish on a benefit system that penalised work and fostered dependency. This was a human as well as an economic disaster.
The welfare reforms we introduced – including Universal Credit (UC) – were designed to tackle this head-on.
We rolled six complex benefits into a single, simplified system. We tightened the rules around claims, ensuring people who were able to work were helped into jobs. And we increased the incentives to move into employment.
The too-easily forgotten result was that long-term unemployment fell by half, funded by savings from benefits as people went into work. Children living in workless households fell from one in six to below one in 10, meaning that 700,000 more children are growing up with the simple but life-changing advantage of seeing their parents go out to work. Even after all the turbulence of the pandemic, there remain a million fewer workless households than before the reforms.
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