The Westminster lensArchive · Written questions · 346 tabled · 344 answered

Written questions by Barker.

Every parliamentary written question tabled by Paula Barker this session, with the full answer and department. See how every department answers, or back to the MP page.

Department:All (346)Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (74)Department for Work and Pensions (41)Department of Health and Social Care (37)Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (33)Home Office (32)Department for Transport (25)Department for Education (20)Department for Culture, Media and Sport (14)Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (14)Ministry of Justice (13)Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (12)Department for Business and Trade (9)

Showing 4141 of 41 · Department for Work and Pensions

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29 Jul 2024·Department for Work and Pensions·Answered
Asked

What steps her Department will take to incentivise young people who live in supported accommodation to work more hours.

Reply

We acknowledge the challenge presented by the interaction between Universal Credit and Housing Benefit for those residing in supported housing. However, people in supported housing and in receipt of Housing Benefit are always better off in work than not working at all. It is the department’s priority to ensure that those who can work are supported to enter the labour market and to sustain employment. DWP is working in conjunction with West Midlands Combined Authority on a Proof of Concept which will test financial support for eligible 18–24-year-olds living in commissioned supported housing who move into work or increase their working hours and cease receiving Universal Credit. We are hopeful that this will provide new insight to inform future policy. The Government’s Back to Work Plan is critical to growing the economy. This includes implementing a new national jobs and career service to help get more people into work alongside a Youth Guarantee. This will mean more quality opportunities for training, apprenticeships and help to find work for all young people aged 18-21 years old, preventing them from becoming excluded from the world of work at a young age.

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Sources
SourceUK Parliament Members API
MethodQuestion and answer text as published. Question preamble (“To ask the…”) trimmed for readability; answers shown in full.