CAP highlights the case of Beth, a care worker with £21,000 of debt, including £7,200 from an Income Support overpayment 20 years ago. The age of the debt meant that when she was ordered to pay, she had no idea whether it was correct, or how to appeal. Such tales are not uncommon. The Child Poverty Action Group has calculated that nearly two million children live in households where debt repayments are being taken from Universal Credit for historic tax credit muddles, more recent benefit advances, and similar.
Even the right-wing think tank, the Centre for Social Justice, has suggested writing off tax credit debts that are more than three years old, arguing that trying to claw it back “isn’t efficient or effective”. But in the past few years, the government has done the opposite: launching a drive to trawl through records dating back to 2003.
Two-thirds (64%) of people with government-owed debts live below the poverty line, according to CAP, meaning they are significantly poorer than those who approach the charity for help only with consumer credit debt.
These are debts born overwhelmingly by the poorest, and owed to the government – in other words, to the Crown. Why not just write it all off?
“Looking at debt to government would be a very good way to go just to relieve some of that pressure on lower-income households,” Cox said.
The government – the Crown – could lead the way in doing so from its own departments, and also use the central purse to reimburse local authorities owed money for council tax, rent and social care arrears.
Immiserating a whole class
Those against debt write-off will cry ‘moral hazard’ and claim ‘forgiving us our debts’ would simply encourage future reckless behaviour, with people sliding back into debt.
But those behind on the payment of daily essentials aren’t failing morally, and they aren’t ‘sinners’. They’ve been let down by chaotic systems that generated overpayments through no fault of their own, or by Universal Credit, with its incredibly tight sanctions for missed appointments, which effectively turn payments into a loan that has to be repaid.
It’s not greed that’s got these people into debt with the government – it’s benefits and benefit eligibility that are deliberately set at levels that are amongst the meanest in the developed world. This is immiserating a whole class who, even if their household works all the hours God sends, increasingly can’t earn enough to live on in our globalised, post-industrial, low wage, stagnant economy.
The way to avoid a ‘moral hazard’ and stop people sliding back into debt, post-debt jubilee, is to mend the tattered safety net.
Even before energy bills started to soar last autumn, nearly four million low-income households were in debt on their bills, with 1.4 million in council tax arrears, the same number in debt to their energy provider, and almost a million in rent arrears. This is triple the number of households that were behind on payments before the pandemic took its toll.
Some might claim that returning £16bn or so to the pockets of the country’s poorest would only stoke inflation – but even the head of the Bank of England has acknowledged it’s soaring commodity prices and other supply shocks, not excess money, that are responsible for 80% of the UK’s inflation overshoot.
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