London Cuts

Monday 03 August, 2015 Written by  Theo Barry Born
London Cuts Protest

Council Tax Support - the silent cut 

Significant cuts to working tax credits, an extension of the benefit cap to £23,000 in London (£20,000 everywhere else), and a four year freeze on working age benefits are among some of the welfare reforms to command the headlines since the Chancellor’s Emergency Budget on 8 July. Many Londoners, both in and out of work, are likely to be worse off over the coming years.

In the midst of this, it’s easy to forget other reforms that have already been taking place and affecting the incomes of those at the bottom. One such change, introduced in April 2013, was the localisation of Council Tax Support (CTS), formally Council Tax Benefit (CTB). CTS is not additional income, but rather amounts to a discount in the amount of Council Tax a family is required to pay. The change marked a historic move from a nationally devised system to 326 local ones across England. Alongside this restructuring, the money provided by central government to fund CTS was cut by 10%. Each local authority is now responsible for designing their own scheme within these new constraints, with the requirement that changes only apply to working age claimants and not to pensioners.

London has seen a variety of schemes, with 6 London boroughs having retained the previous level of support. Of these, two are Conservative, two Labour and two have no overall control. All other London boroughs have altered their scheme from CTB and passed on some proportion of the cut to claimants. Commonly councils have made up the shortfall by reducing the maximum entitlement to CTS, with 24 boroughs introducing a ‘minimum payment’ of Council Tax that all families are required to pay. The highest minimum payment in London is in Harrow, at 30%.

In effect, this is experienced as an additional tax rather than a cut in benefits, involving payment of something that in most cases would not have to have been paid before. In fact, many former CTB claimants saw a considerably bigger rise in Council Tax than others, due to the constraint preventing councils from increasing Council Tax to all residents by more than 2% without holding a referendum.

Unlike other parts of the country where there has been a slight increase in the average Band D Council Tax payment required by local authorities, in the London area Band D Council Tax fell by 1% between 2010/11 and 2014/15. Research by the Meanwhile, research by the New Policy Institute shows that over 436,000 families in London are now required to pay on average £163 per year (over £3 per week) more Council Tax than they would have done under CTB in 2012/13.

These changes have led to an increase in debts and arrears. In the 2013/14, the first year of new scheme,  council tax arrears rose in almost three quarters of councils across the country. Total arrears in London’s boroughs rose by around one third. In areas where the new schemes had a higher minimum payment, arrears tended to be higher. Recent research from the IFS bears this out – low income families in areas with higher minimum payments are more likely to be behind with their bills.

Unpaid Council Tax leaves families liable to court summonses and bailiff action, which can result in further unpayable debt. It is the local authority, not central government, who have to bear any loss. Many councils have resisted using stringent enforcement mechanisms such as summonses or bailiffs with former CTS claimants, but the pressure to act is mounting with some households now owing two or more years of council tax. Citizens Advice says problems with council tax payment are one of the leading reasons for calls to its debt helplines

Cuts to CTS are continuing across London, with 7 boroughs further reducing support by changing components of their scheme in April 2015. The Welfare Reform and Work Bill is likely to command the attention of Londoners for some time, as its effects on low income families become visible over the coming years. In the meantime, the more ‘silent’ cut to Council Tax Support will continue to put a further strain on the finances of both local authorities and low income families in the capital. 

How council tax support schemes vary across London - click the years to see how schemes have changed

London Cuts 2013

London Cuts 2014

London Cuts 2015

Source: This piece originally appeared in The Londonist on the 24th July

See more at: http://npi.org.uk/blog/local-government/council-tax-support-silent-cut/#sthash.sapLQMpb.dpuf

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