Housing Benefit (Abolition of Social Sector Size Criteria) Debate

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Department: Department for Work and Pensions

Housing Benefit (Abolition of Social Sector Size Criteria)

Oliver Heald Excerpts
Wednesday 17th December 2014

(9 years, 5 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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Mark Harper Portrait Mr Harper
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It is simply not the case that people have been pushed out of London: 84% of the capped households in inner London that have moved continue to live in the central boroughs. The idea that hundreds of thousands of people would be forced out of London is simply not true.

Oliver Heald Portrait Sir Oliver Heald (North East Hertfordshire) (Con)
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The Minister is making a point about employment and people moving into work. Is not the end of dependency a huge social change? Each one of those people has been helped by this Government.

Mark Harper Portrait Mr Harper
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My hon. and learned Friend is absolutely right.

According to the latest statistics, landlord claims for possession across the whole social rented sector are down 14% on the year, and warrants for eviction are down 3%. Housing association rent arrears have fallen on the year, and rent collections are stable at 99%. We have not seen a mass exodus to the private sector. Social sector lettings have increased, moves from the social sector to the private rented sector have fallen—down almost 20,000 since 2010-11—and, as I have said, the cost of paying housing benefit in the private sector has fallen in real terms for the past two years, in contrast to what happened when the Labour party was in power.

As we approach the general election, we face a choice. The Opposition talk about welfare waste, but they wasted £26 billion on botched IT and lost control of welfare spending when they were in government. They also wasted the lives of a lot of our constituents. At its peak, there were 5 million people on out-of-work benefits—1 million for a decade or more—while youth unemployment increased by a half, long-term unemployment doubled in two years, one in five households were workless and the number of households in which no one had ever worked almost doubled.