Oral Answers to Questions

Debate between Mark Harper and Jim Cunningham
Monday 9th March 2015

(9 years, 5 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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Jim Cunningham Portrait Mr Jim Cunningham (Coventry South) (Lab)
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Has the Secretary of State seen the Citizens Advice report which shows that many ESA claimants are left with no money and are reliant on food banks after being told that they are too fit to claim ESA and not fit enough to claim JSA? Most have had to wait up to 10 weeks for a decision. Will the Minister look into this?

Mark Harper Portrait Mr Harper
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If the hon. Gentleman is referring to mandatory reconsideration when somebody is found fit for work, he will know that the average length of time taken to decide one of those is 13 days, not 13 weeks. He will also know that if someone is found fit for work, they are able to claim jobseeker’s allowance and they will receive support from the jobcentre to help them get back into work.

Oral Answers to Questions

Debate between Mark Harper and Jim Cunningham
Monday 8th December 2014

(9 years, 8 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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Jim Cunningham Portrait Mr Jim Cunningham (Coventry South) (Lab)
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2. If he will make it his policy to pay employment and support allowance during the period of mandatory reconsideration.

Mark Harper Portrait The Minister for Disabled People (Mr Mark Harper)
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I am afraid that I am going to disappoint the hon. Gentleman. We are not going to change our policy in that way. When someone is found fit for work, they should claim jobseeker’s allowance and work with Jobcentre Plus to get back into the work force.

Jim Cunningham Portrait Mr Cunningham
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I think that the Work and Pensions Committee has also termed the policy illogical, but does the Minister not realise that, by virtue of the fact that he is not prepared to change it, he is driving more and more people into hardship and that they, in turn, are having to use food banks? The Government must hold some sort of record on food banks, because under this Government their use is the only thing that is increasing.

Mark Harper Portrait Mr Harper
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That was not the sort of question I normally expect from the hon. Gentleman. If someone is found fit for work, they should immediately apply for jobseeker’s allowance, which is paid at the same rate as the assessment rate of employment and support allowance, so there is no change in their income. They should then engage with their Jobcentre Plus contact so that they can be moved into work. That is the right way for someone to behave when they have been found fit for work, and there is no reason at all why their income should fall.

Personal Independence Payments

Debate between Mark Harper and Jim Cunningham
Tuesday 28th October 2014

(9 years, 10 months ago)

Westminster Hall
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Mark Harper Portrait Mr Harper
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Okay. On other passporting issues, blue badges can be issued without PIP being in payment, so if someone is not getting PIP, it does not mean that they cannot get a blue badge. NHS help with travel expenses and prescriptions is based on the receipt of income-related benefits. Local authorities are able to provide social care or help with adaptations on the basis of their assessments, and they should not exclude people just because they are not entitled to the personal independence payment.

In the couple of minutes remaining, I shall say a little more about claims relating to those who are terminally ill. In addition to the things that I have mentioned, we have put in place a dedicated phone service for such claims, as well as an electronic form so that the medical information we require from GPs and consultants can get to the Department as quickly as possible. As I said, we are now achieving the performance that we would want from the Department, so we have made progress in that area.

I understand the frustrations that people have experienced. There have been cases in my constituency of people waiting too long. I have been frank about that, and my top priority is to improve that situation. We are making progress and moving in the right direction, and we will hit the Secretary of State’s commitment by the end of the year—I give the right hon. Gentleman my assurance about that. I have clearly set out that we are spending more money on supporting those on DLA and PIP in every year of this Parliament compared with the year we came to office. It is not the case that we are dealing with the deficit off the backs of disabled people, and I want to ensure that the customer experience is improved.

The right hon. Gentleman talked about an independent review. He will know that Paul Gray has been appointed to carry out the first independent review. He has taken evidence from a range of people involved in this benefit. He is due to provide his report, which the Department will publish, by the end of the year. It will set out, according to his terms of reference, information about the quality of assessments, how the providers are performing and whether the assessments are correctly putting people into the right categories.

Jim Cunningham Portrait Mr Jim Cunningham
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Will the Minister give way?

Mark Harper Portrait Mr Harper
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So long as the hon. Gentleman is very quick, as we have 35 seconds left.

Jim Cunningham Portrait Mr Cunningham
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I will be as quick as I can. On the 75,000 claims waiting to be assessed, what progress has been made in England? The Minister has talked about Scotland, but what about England, where there are similar problems?

Mark Harper Portrait Mr Harper
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I recognise that the hon. Gentleman represents an English constituency, as I do. We are making progress in England. By focusing on Scotland, I was not trying to say that that is the only place where we are making progress, as we are making progress across Great Britain. I was simply making the point to the right hon. Member for Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill that the performance in Scotland is better than it is elsewhere in Great Britain, and I hope that what I have said will reassure constituents.

Income Distribution and Taxation

Debate between Mark Harper and Jim Cunningham
Wednesday 9th April 2014

(10 years, 4 months ago)

Westminster Hall
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Mark Harper Portrait Mr Harper
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I cannot answer the right hon. Gentleman’s detailed question, because I have not studied the matter, but the other thing that he needs to do—I am not sure whether he has incorporated this into his judgment—is look at the interaction of the tax changes that we have made with the benefit system. Over this Parliament, there will be a significant increase in the personal allowance from what it was in 2010-11 when we came to power, and what it will be when this Parliament finishes, from something in the order of £6,000 or £6,500 to £10,500. A lot of people on lower incomes, such as those on the minimum wage, are moved out of the taxation system altogether. Previously, people could be on a relatively modest income and paying tax, but at the same time getting various income-related benefits.

I think that I have set that out carefully, but if I have not, the Minister will do so in her response. Otherwise, because the debate is not about universal credit and she might not have all those facts at her fingertips, I am sure she is happy to write and to set it out in detail later. I am, however, grateful for the point made by the right hon. Gentleman.

Jim Cunningham Portrait Mr Jim Cunningham (Coventry South) (Lab)
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I will be quick, as the hon. Gentleman does not have much time. I thank him for giving way, but when the present Government came to power basically someone did not start paying tax until just over £6,000. I do not have the exact figures with me, but if we take into account, for example, 6% inflation over the past four years, the value of the £10,000 threshold that has been introduced drops by £1,200. In other words, had the £6,000 been pushed up for inflation over the past four years, we might arrive at a different value for the benefits to be got out of £10,000 before paying tax.

Mark Harper Portrait Mr Harper
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The hon. Gentleman makes half a sensible point. He is right that the personal allowance would have gone up because of indexation in line with inflation—the statutory provision, unless the Chancellor decides not, in which case he has to set out why—but by only a relatively modest amount. The difference between what it would have gone up to had we simply indexed it and the great increase to £10,500 next year is a significant policy change and has made a real difference to people on lower incomes, many of whom will have been taken out of tax completely.

Finally, to look at the impact in my own constituency, under the tax changes this April a further 381 people are taken out of tax altogether, but 37,223 people benefit from the rise in the personal allowance. If we take the figures for the whole of the Parliament, 4,334 of my constituents will have been taken out of paying income tax entirely by the significant changes in the personal allowance. That significant benefit incentivises people, particularly at the lower end of the income spectrum, to work, and it is why there are several thousand more people in my constituency in work now than there were in 2010, when this Government were elected.

In the environment we are in, where we have a limited amount of money and we cannot cut taxes for everybody, we should focus our help on those who are lower paid and who are genuinely on middle incomes, which, as I said, are incomes of about £20,000, and not numbers beginning with threes or fours. In my constituency, I can see that that is where the benefit should be focused. It should be a priority both for this Government and for our party to make sure that we are delivering benefit to as many people as possible. I am pleased to say that the message I took from the Budget, after listening to the Chancellor’s speech very carefully, was that that was where he has aimed our tax changes.

I agree with the right hon. Member for Oxford East (Mr Smith) about the focus. The welfare changes that we are making, with the benefit cap and the changes to universal credit, which I think, overall, have increased the incentives for people to work, are the right messages. The very simple one is that work should always pay and that we are trying to use our changes to the tax system to benefit the many hard-working families who are trying to do the right thing, but who are finding things difficult—although with the improving economic news, they will see rises in their incomes above the rate of inflation, therefore making them better off in real terms. Those are the people we should focus on and I am pleased that, in my judgment, that is exactly where the Chancellor aimed his Budget. That is why I was very pleased, in my short speech in the Budget debate, to commend it to the House, and why I am very pleased to support the Finance Bill.

Oral Answers to Questions

Debate between Mark Harper and Jim Cunningham
Monday 19th November 2012

(11 years, 9 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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Jim Cunningham Portrait Mr Jim Cunningham (Coventry South) (Lab)
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T6. I was interested in the answers on student visas because a week ago on Saturday, I had a meeting at Coventry university with a Minister from Oman who takes an interest in science and technology and who wants to do business with the university. The issues raised were the delay in getting student visas, which seems to be putting people off, and the cost for students. What will the Government do about that? It is no good making excuses.

Mark Harper Portrait Mr Harper
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It sounds as though it would be helpful if I looked at the details of the case, so I would be happy to hear from the hon. Gentleman. In most cases, visa applications are processed very quickly. We say yes in most cases and deliver a timely service. Without knowing the specifics, such as which country the students are from, it is difficult to give a specific answer. [Interruption.] The hon. Gentleman says Oman. We deliver an excellent visa processing service for a number of the Gulf countries. If he gives me more details, I will look into the matter for him.