The welfare cap
Since 2014 the UK government has had a cap on welfare spending. Here we explain how the cap is set and assessed. We also look at how the cap has changed.
State pension, benefit and tax credit increases in April 2015 - what the rates are and how are they are calculated.
2015 Benefit uprating (782 KB , PDF)
Since April 2013, there have been two main factors used to increase benefits. Benefits aimed at disabled people and pensioners will increase in line with CPI inflation (1.2%). Most benefits and tax credits for working age people are being increased by 1%.
The Government has introduced a ‘triple guarantee’ for uprating the basic state pension, meaning that it increases by the highest of the increase in earnings, prices (as measured by the CPI) or 2.5%. For the purposes of the 2015-16 uprating, 2.5% was the highest of these three benchmarks.
The Pension Credit standard minimum guarantee is required to be increased at least in line with earnings; the relevant earnings benchmark rose by 0.6%. However, for the fifth year in a row the Government has decided on an above-earnings increase so that recipients of Pension Credit Guarantee Credit get the same cash increase as those on the Basic State Pension. This is again being paid for by cutting the value of Pension Credit Savings Credit.
The main elements of Working Tax Credit have been uprated by 1% in 2015-16. Child Benefit will also be increased by 1% from April 2015.
2015 Benefit uprating (782 KB , PDF)
Since 2014 the UK government has had a cap on welfare spending. Here we explain how the cap is set and assessed. We also look at how the cap has changed.
Explore constituency-level data on people claiming Universal Credit in Great Britain using our interactive dashboard.
The Armed Forces Pension Scheme is an occupational pension scheme open to most members of the armed forces. This briefing explains the legislative background to the schemes, the benefits for each pension scheme and covers current issues such as the McCloud remedy.