News5 mins ago
Cheating Pensioners Will Be Forced To Sell Their House....
....to repay the taxpayers says Iain Duncan Smith.
// Welfare cheats will be forced to sell their homes and pay higher fines to reimburse taxpayers for the money they have wrongly claimed, under plans to tackle benefit fraud.
Hundreds of thousands of pensioners who fail to declare their full earnings from private pension schemes will also be targeted as fraud investigators trawl through HM Revenue & Customs records.
:: Existing claimants will be cross-checked against HMRC records to catch pensioners who are receiving extra income than they have declared from private schemes, while also claiming pension credit, a means-tested benefit.
Officials estimate that fraud by pensioners failing to declare their full income cost taxpayers £170 million last year, up from £140 million in 2012.
Officials expect to find 300,000 pensioners and workers who are claiming benefits to which they are not entitled because they have not declared their full income. The system will be tried out this month.
The plans form part of a major campaign from ministers this week to publicise reforms to the welfare system, which the Conservatives regard as among their most popular, vote-winning policies. //
http:// www.tel egraph. co.uk/n ews/pol itics/1 0747122 /Benefi t-cheat s-face- higher- fines-a nd-losi ng-thei r-homes .html
A vote winning policy - What's not to like?
// Welfare cheats will be forced to sell their homes and pay higher fines to reimburse taxpayers for the money they have wrongly claimed, under plans to tackle benefit fraud.
Hundreds of thousands of pensioners who fail to declare their full earnings from private pension schemes will also be targeted as fraud investigators trawl through HM Revenue & Customs records.
:: Existing claimants will be cross-checked against HMRC records to catch pensioners who are receiving extra income than they have declared from private schemes, while also claiming pension credit, a means-tested benefit.
Officials estimate that fraud by pensioners failing to declare their full income cost taxpayers £170 million last year, up from £140 million in 2012.
Officials expect to find 300,000 pensioners and workers who are claiming benefits to which they are not entitled because they have not declared their full income. The system will be tried out this month.
The plans form part of a major campaign from ministers this week to publicise reforms to the welfare system, which the Conservatives regard as among their most popular, vote-winning policies. //
http://
A vote winning policy - What's not to like?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Gromit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you are right about pension credit why is it that over the past 4 years my credit has been reduced from almost £5 a week down to 82p a week this year. My savings have been reduced by about £5000 in that time. due to house repairs that are essential. Maybe I should get in touch with the pension service
I’m not getting picky. I just don’t understand why you think people on benefits are more ‘deserving’ than anyone else. If your friend is in a wheelchair I’ve no doubt the benefits he’s receiving are substantial – and I speak from experience. He is entitled to keep his spare room – if he’s willing to pay for it. I think much of the problem is people are not willing to do that.
People who are overpaid because someone elses mistake are not cheating
thank you Ummm
and what the Civil servants kick off with is a bland statement that it is not their fault so can the lucky claimant show it is ?
Everyne think they should get an old age pension - but if you have not made enough conts then you get a lower pension and a top up known as pension credit and this is the thing that is means tested and goes up and down depending on other income.
and income can change if you get married, someone dies and so on.
It took me a year ( but I was ill ) to realise a fren' was being overpaid and that when I was doing his tax form for them. We ( he they ) made a voluntary declaration and the payments go hay wire for a few quarters without any explanation
and we are not talking about large amounts of money ( here is was £2000) and he commented it is a lot to me
howevr compared to the MPs expenses - peanuts....
thank you Ummm
and what the Civil servants kick off with is a bland statement that it is not their fault so can the lucky claimant show it is ?
Everyne think they should get an old age pension - but if you have not made enough conts then you get a lower pension and a top up known as pension credit and this is the thing that is means tested and goes up and down depending on other income.
and income can change if you get married, someone dies and so on.
It took me a year ( but I was ill ) to realise a fren' was being overpaid and that when I was doing his tax form for them. We ( he they ) made a voluntary declaration and the payments go hay wire for a few quarters without any explanation
and we are not talking about large amounts of money ( here is was £2000) and he commented it is a lot to me
howevr compared to the MPs expenses - peanuts....
naomi, you are very argumentitive and 'cherry pick' on points raised, the main point of my thread is this, why should disabled people have to pay for a spare room when MPs can work the system for financial gain, again I say, who is the more deserving, ie. qualified for or having a claim to reward, assistance, etc., because of one's actions, qualities, or situation: the deserving poor; a deserving applicant.
saintpeter48, you say I’m argumentative because I don’t agree with you. Yes, MPs can work the system and it is open to abuse, but no one is expected to work away from home and pay their own expenses. People on benefits are not necessarily ‘the deserving poor’ – whatever that may mean - and they are not entitled to expect the taxpayer to subsidise them beyond their needs.
Ladybirder, neither do I really.
Ladybirder, neither do I really.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.