How to reduce the ‘premium’ paid by low income households for fuel, financial services and education is the subject of the Bevan Foundation’s latest report, launched today.
It argues that although the Assembly Government cannot influence household’s income, there is a great deal it can do to make low incomes go further and, in particular, stop low income families being penalised.
Making better use of grants is a key theme. Dishing out relatively small amounts of cash that then subsidise overpriced goods and services is inefficient and achieves little: instead, steps should be taken to link grants with cutting costs, e.g. winter fuel payments and home insulation.
Another key issue is payments: over and again low income households are penalised because they pay cash, often in in small amounts rather than lump sums. Making better use of the post office network, putting cash on the same footing as direct debit payments and fair enforcement of debts are all explored.
And last, the public and community sector – as an important provider of services – needs to lead e.g. by maintaining payments in cash, fair debt collection, negotiating discounts for bulk purchases such as school uniforms, electricity for social housing or insurance, and complying with guidance on poverty.
The project was a partnership with Consumer Focus Wales, National Energy Action Cymru and Save the Children Cymru and was funded by the Welsh Assembly Government’s New Ideas Fund.
Angela Elniff-Larsen 4:54 pm on 17 November, 2009 Permalink
Doing something about token meters would be good to ,although if you over pay you get it refunded, its not an efficent way to pay for heating and lighting. its also more expensive than normal metering This hits poorer families hard.
Robert 8:57 am on 18 November, 2009 Permalink
I’m disabled after an accident at work, my daughter is a drug addict, so social service brought us our two grand kids said do not worry we will help you, they left us with two kids and never returned, we live in a one bedroom bungalow four of us. It took a year to get all the benefits we were entitled to , what a bloody fight. and the excuse of your file is being looked at, then your file is lost can you fill out more forms it was never ending.
I’m in abject poverty , worse is my wife is now disabled as her spine starts to crumble and doctors say it’s just from hard work and spina bifia which she was born with.
Life is hard boy is it hard, so some busy body knocking on my door telling us we should be doing this or tha,t is not going to help.
What would help is finding us jobs we can do, finding us cheaper fuel cost, if your going to send people to tell me how to live do not bother we know.
fact is benefits in the Uk are to low, do not worry i do not vote Labour anymore the party of the middle England rich as for the Assembly it can do sod all except come outr with silly idea’s about getting people jobs to help the poor, offer the jobs to the poor.