Sarah Hadfield
@drsarahhadfield.bsky.social
45 followers 69 following 15 posts
Policy Researcher at Citizens Advice. Visiting Fellow at The OU. Posting about Social Policy as it relates to Employment, Precarity, Social Welfare. In to Social, Employment Rights & Financial Autonomy. More on LinkedIn, definitely not on Twitter.
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Reposted by Sarah Hadfield
beccastacey.bsky.social
The govt wants to get more disabled people into work, but isn't making full use of the tools at its disposal

In my new report for @citizensadvice.bsky.social I've looked at how our social security system could do more to make sure that when disabled people want to work, work really does pay /1
drsarahhadfield.bsky.social
Is follow friday still a thing? Any OGs out there who remember #followfriday! Shoutout to @hthrt28.bsky.social for all things Employment Law/Future of Work and AI/Flexible working.
drsarahhadfield.bsky.social
We must ask ourselves how this changes the social contract been us and the state and what this says about us as a society: are we no longer prepared to support or help those with severe, life long conditions or ill health? #welfarereform #universalcreditbill #socialpolicy
drsarahhadfield.bsky.social
Govs claim that Universal Credit Bill will incentivise people to work is ‘wishful thinking’ - @victoria-anns.bsky.social outlines how the bill will create a two-tiered system of support. It won’t help disabled people into work/ people with severe, life-long conditions may miss out on protections.
victoria-anns.bsky.social
Cuts to disability benefits weren’t totally averted!

🚨New report out today explaining why the Universal Credit Bill will harm disabled people and exploring who will be impacted by the cuts.

www.citizensadvice.org.uk/policy/publi...
drsarahhadfield.bsky.social
Govs claim that Universal Credit Bill will incentivise people to work is ‘wishful thinking’ - @victoria-anns.bsky.social outlines how the bill will create a two-tiered system of support. It won’t help disabled people into work/ people with severe, life-long conditions may miss out on protections.
drsarahhadfield.bsky.social
We set out policy options for the UC review to consider, so there can be a better fit between employment and UC: www.citizensadvice.org.uk/policy/publi...
drsarahhadfield.bsky.social
The unintended consequences of UC’s monthly model is that it leaves our clients feeling confused and distressed, and causes income fluctuation rather than stability. UC doesn’t need to be this way.
drsarahhadfield.bsky.social
As a result of the UC monthly assessment including an extra pay packet, claimants income looks higher, and they can become ineligible for other sources of financial assistance.
drsarahhadfield.bsky.social
The monthly assessment model is at odds with how many people are paid, resulting in unnecessary and sometimes extreme UC income variations:
drsarahhadfield.bsky.social
As it currently stands UC’s design creates ongoing challenges for working households whose wages don’t follow stable and/or monthly patterns creating unnecessary UC income fluctuations.
drsarahhadfield.bsky.social
New @citizensadvice.bsky.social briefing published with @julia-rt.bsky.social‬ on how Universal Credit can adapt to promote income stability for working households. We set out policy options for the UC review to consider to reflect the reality of low paid employment.
Reposted by Sarah Hadfield
jagnaolejniczak.bsky.social
The narrative around Universal Credit has long centred around work incentives.

This new briefing examines how effective UC is at encouraging employment – and how that focus may have overshadowed the deeper complexities of getting into work. 🧵

🔗 www.citizensadvice.org.uk/policy/publi...
Work incentives aren't working: is the Universal Credit review asking the right questions?
www.citizensadvice.org.uk
drsarahhadfield.bsky.social
Essential therefore to recognise that the #employmentrightsbill will impact on workers differently. We must ask who is the #employmentrightsbill is for...how will it really impact on those who are in employment with low employment rights.
workfoundation.bsky.social
Previous Work Foundation research looked at the experiences of disabled people at work and found that they are 1.5 times more likely to be in severely insecure work relative to non-disabled people. (5/5)

t.co/6ZFUaqsUZg
Image card showing the text:

Disabled workers are 1.5 times more likely to be in severely insecure work than non-disabled workers.

The Disability Gap: Insecure work in the UK (June 2023). Work Foundation.
drsarahhadfield.bsky.social
Congrats! REALLY well deserved! 👏