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· Union body publishes regional and constituency impact on working families of slashing universal credit
· Most families hit by £1040pa cut are in work, say anti-poverty campaigners
· Many of those affected by cut will be key workers, warns TUC
· Cutting universal credit is “levelling down”

The TUC has today (Friday) warned that over nearly 200,000 working families – and many key worker households – will be worse off in the South West as a result of the government’s planned cut to universal credit.

The new analysis published by the union body also reveals the regional and local impact cutting universal credit will have on low-paid workers.

Majority of those hit by autumn cuts are working families 

185,000 workers in the region are currently receiving universal credit – the equivalent of 2 in 5 (42%) of all universal credit recipients. They will all be hit by the £20pw cut. 

Working tax credits is also being slashed in October, having been raised by £20pw in early 2020.  

This means that the majority of those affected by the £20pw cut to benefits this autumn will be families who are working, according to the Joseph Rowntree Foundation. 

Key workers among hardest hit

Low-paid key workers will be among those worst affected and the TUC believes this will put further pressure on employers to provide decent pay rises. 

Recent TUC research published this summer showed that one million children in key worker households are currently growing up poverty – with many currently relying on in-work benefits like universal credit to boost poverty wages.

In addition to stopping the planned £20pw cut to universal credit, the government must increase the minimum wage to £10 an hour and urgently bring forward an employment bill to tackle insecure work, says the union body.

Ministers must abandon this cruel cut that will hit low-income working families.

South West TUC Regional Secretary Nigel Costley said: 

“Everyone should have enough money to live on yet many are struggling to make ends meet here.

"The figures also starkly show how difficult it can be to find decent, secure, well paid work in many parts of the region. Many workers in coastal and rural areas only have temporary, low paid work available. Universal credit is therefore a lifeline for them.

“If the universal credit cut goes ahead many working families – and key workers – up and down the region will be forced to get by on much less every week. This is levelling down – not levelling up as we were promised.  

“Ministers must abandon this cruel cut that will hit low-income working families. We need a social security system that helps people get back on their feet – not one that locks them in poverty.

“And we need decent jobs on decent pay for every worker.

“That means increasing the minimum wage, investing to create good green jobs, tackling the scourge of insecure work, and giving all our key workers a proper pay rise. 

"Simply cutting universal credit is not the way to create decent work.”

Editors note

Number of workers receiving universal credit by parliamentary constituency (excludes those to be transferred over from the working tax credit). 

Constituency

Number of people in work receiving UC

Total number of people receiving UC

% of UC recipients in work

Bath

2,844

7,017

40.5%

Bournemouth East

4,568

11,543

39.6%

Bournemouth West

4,554

11,380

40.0%

Bridgwater and West Somerset

4,575

10,855

42.1%

Bristol East

3,814

9,767

39.0%

Bristol North West

3,542

8,719

40.6%

Bristol South

4,617

11,778

39.2%

Bristol West

4,720

12,376

38.1%

Camborne and Redruth

3,777

8,848

42.7%

Central Devon

2,325

5,597

41.5%

Cheltenham

3,493

8,213

42.5%

Chippenham

2,941

6,862

42.9%

Christchurch

2,051

4,956

41.4%

Devizes

2,733

6,122

44.6%

East Devon

3,026

6,388

47.4%

Exeter

3,555

8,188

43.4%

Filton and Bradley Stoke

3,039

6,546

46.4%

Forest of Dean

2,437

6,296

38.7%

Gloucester

4,905

11,743

41.8%

Kingswood

2,506

5,624

44.6%

Mid Dorset and North Poole

2,206

4,761

46.3%

Newton Abbot

2,960

6,712

44.1%

North Cornwall

3,238

7,721

41.9%

North Devon

3,454

7,944

43.5%

North Dorset

2,394

5,526

43.3%

North East Somerset

2,768

6,316

43.8%

North Somerset

2,002

4,504

44.4%

North Swindon

4,442

10,542

42.1%

North Wiltshire

2,342

5,478

42.8%

Plymouth, Moor View

3,981

9,796

40.6%

Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport

5,361

14,434

37.1%

Poole

3,366

8,109

41.5%

Salisbury

3,195

7,006

45.6%

Somerton and Frome

3,035

7,779

39.0%

South Dorset

3,741

8,551

43.7%

South East Cornwall

2,749

7,053

39.0%

South Swindon

4,724

11,411

41.4%

South West Devon

2,304

4,999

46.1%

South West Wiltshire

3,416

7,993

42.7%

St Austell and Newquay

4,701

10,585

44.4%

St Ives

3,159

7,333

43.1%

Stroud

2,768

6,338

43.7%

Taunton Deane

4,178

9,605

43.5%

Tewkesbury

3,044

6,702

45.4%

The Cotswolds

2,382

5,520

43.2%

Thornbury and Yate

2,079

4,597

45.2%

Tiverton and Honiton

3,025

6,804

44.5%

Torbay

4,404

10,925

40.3%

Torridge and West Devon

3,012

7,150

42.1%

Totnes

2,503

6,279

39.9%

Truro and Falmouth

3,225

7,382

43.7%

Wells

3,565

8,599

41.5%

West Dorset

2,634

6,150

42.8%

Weston-Super-Mare

4,634

10,959

42.3%

Yeovil

3,981

9,219

43.2%

South West

184,983

439,612

42.1%

Source: TUC analysis of Stat Explore data using May 2021 data

-Information on relative levels of wealth and deprivation in parliamentary constituencies can be found here: https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-7327/

- The Trades Union Congress (TUC) exists to make the working world a better place for everyone. We bring together the 5.5 million working people who make up our 48 member unions. We support unions to grow and thrive, and we stand up for everyone who works for a living.

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