Stef Benstead
@stefbenstead.bsky.social
370 followers 200 following 79 posts
Christian interested in socio-economic justice. Chronically ill with hEDS, PoTS, fibro/Small Fibre Neuropathy. Independent (unpaid) researcher in chronic illness and social policy. Books: Second Class Citizens; Just Worship.
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
stefbenstead.bsky.social
Shock discovery that people who are eligible for *and claim* PIP get more PIP than people who are eligible for *but don't claim* PIP.
And more money than people who aren't eligible and don't claim, but not enough to mitigate the extra costs of disability.
www.telegraph.co.uk/business/202...
Sickness benefits pay more than the minimum wage for one million Britons
UK ‘writing off’ generation of young people with welfare payments of up to £25,000 a year
www.telegraph.co.uk
stefbenstead.bsky.social
"Everyone ultimately believes in some moral absolutes. Once we realise this, the new question becomes: Which set of beliefs and moral absolutes leads us to embrace most fully those from whom we deeply differ?"
Tim Keller, The Prodigal Prophet, pg173
stefbenstead.bsky.social
Anyone with LCWRA status before 2028, when the WCA is scrapped, gets to keep that status in perpetuity. So I'd guess that technically there's no legal challenge, because people assessed under the current regime don't lose their status. It's new people who are screwed.
stefbenstead.bsky.social
If one of the better employment support programmes, targeting a healthier group of sick and disabled people, still can't get 82.5% of participants into sustained paid work - then what does Labour really think will happen to 2.5-3mn people who aren't fit for work?
stefbenstead.bsky.social
Despite the Solent Jobs Programme offering a lot more than most employment support programmes, and including JSA recipients, it didn't get substantially larger results.
72% did not move into work.
82.5% did not move into sustained work (26 weeks).
That's with a *good* programme.
stefbenstead.bsky.social
SJP seems to me to have been a relatively good programme. There were real job brokers. Participants had regular support. They could go on work tasters and subsidised work, both of which increased work outcomes. They could access OH, and courses for mental health and wellbeing.
stefbenstead.bsky.social
This blogpost looks at the Solent Job Programme.
Regression analysis suggests it increased employment outcomes by 7-8.7% points, to 28%.
However, over half of participants were JSA/UC fit for work. And getting work is not the same as sustaining work.
www.stefbenstead.co.uk/post/evidenc...
Evidence that Labour is ignoring: Solent Jobs Programme
The Learning and Work Institute recently released a briefing which, rather optimistically to my mind, suggested that 45,000-95,000 sick and disabled people might move into work as a result of employme...
www.stefbenstead.co.uk
stefbenstead.bsky.social
Latest blog!
I don't think it's as well constructed and written as normal; I'm just too exhausted. But I'm keen to get this work out there, because other reports are over-estimating the likely efficacy of employment support for sick and disabled people who aren't fit for work.
stefbenstead.bsky.social
"After economists on the left bought into the Chicago School’s deference to markets—“we are all Friedmanites now”—social justice became subservient to markets, and a concern with distribution was overruled by attention to the average, often nonsensically described as the “national interest.”"
stefbenstead.bsky.social
"Keynes wrote that the problem of economics is to reconcile economic efficiency, social justice, and individual liberty. We are good at the first, and the libertarian streak in economics constantly pushes the last, but social justice can be an afterthought."
Angus Deaton www.imf.org/en/Publicati...
Rethinking Economics or Rethinking My Economics by Angus Deaton
Questioning one’s views as circumstances evolve can be a good thing
www.imf.org
stefbenstead.bsky.social
"But the others regularly fail to materialize, so that when efficiency comes with upward redistribution—frequently though not inevitably—our recommendations become little more than a license for plunder."
stefbenstead.bsky.social
"Many subscribe to Lionel Robbins’ definition of economics as the allocation of scarce resources among competing ends or to the stronger version that says that economists should focus on efficiency & leave equity to others, to politicians or administrators."
Angus Deaton www.imf.org/en/Publicati...
Rethinking Economics or Rethinking My Economics by Angus Deaton
Questioning one’s views as circumstances evolve can be a good thing
www.imf.org
stefbenstead.bsky.social
Conversely, if you give people timely & adequate healthcare, and create an economy where there are enough jobs for everyone, then you don't *need* to cut social security. More people are in work and fewer people are sick, so Social Security receipt falls naturally.
observer.co.uk/news/politic...
Welfare shake-up is not to save cash, it’s a ‘moral mission’, insists Kendall | The Observer
Independent journalism | News, culture & style | Investigations, analysis, features, ideas, recipes, newsletters & podcasts that make sense of the world
observer.co.uk
stefbenstead.bsky.social
“Some people say wait until you’ve got all the waiting lists down, wait until you’ve created all the new jobs.”
Yes.
Does she know why people say that?
It's because if you cut social security whilst people are sick & there aren't enough jobs, all you're doing is harm.
observer.co.uk/news/politic...
Welfare shake-up is not to save cash, it’s a ‘moral mission’, insists Kendall | The Observer
Independent journalism | News, culture & style | Investigations, analysis, features, ideas, recipes, newsletters & podcasts that make sense of the world
observer.co.uk
stefbenstead.bsky.social
This matters.
"On its own, the number of disabled people explains 71% of the PIP caseload in a particular region. But when we add each region’s relative deprivation using the Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) we can explain 94% of the regional PIP caseload."
neweconomics.org/2025/05/what...
What’s behind the rise in disability benefit claims?
Rising rates of disability colliding with greater financial hardship are pushing more people to seek support
neweconomics.org
stefbenstead.bsky.social
Faced with major opposition and clear evidence against benefit cuts, Labour responds:
"We didn’t go big enough the first time round."
DWP thinks there may need to be a total of £15bn cut from social security.
This would be an unmitigated disaster.
www.theguardian.com/society/2025...
No 10 rethinking winter fuel payment cut after Labour slump in local elections
Exclusive: government fears further electoral losses from unpopular policy as well as from planned £5bn of benefits cuts
www.theguardian.com
stefbenstead.bsky.social
Labour are also very keen not to increase the burden on doctors by needing more sick notes. So they want to somehow determine people's fitness for work and work prep, but not by actually assessing our fitness for work or work prep, nor by asking our doctors.
#DisabilityBenefits
stefbenstead.bsky.social
Labour belatedly - very belatedly - realising that scrapping the test used for assessing people's capacity for work and work-related activity might make it difficult to assess people's capacity for work and work-related activity would be funny if it weren't so serious.
stefbenstead.bsky.social
Ironic qu in the Labour #DisabilityBenefits consult:
"We are consulting therefore on how we should determine who is subject to a requirement only to participate in conversations, or work preparation activity rather than the stronger requirements placed on people in the Intensive Work Search regime."
stefbenstead.bsky.social
"We will also legislate to establish in law the principle that work in and of itself will never lead to a reassessment."
Well, obviously. That is going to happen anyway. Because you're scrapping the WCA, and PIP assessments aren't related to capacity for work.
#DisabilityBenefits
stefbenstead.bsky.social
Benefits and Work have done a really good piece here, looking at what the DWP is and isn't consulting on.
It isn't consulting on the major issues: scrapping WCA; PIP Daily Living & UC Health Element; freezing UC HE until 2029/30; 4-point criterion for PIP
www.benefitsandwork.co.uk/news/dwp-lau...
DWP launches entirely bogus Green Paper consultation
Get the benefits you're entitled to: help with personal independence payment (PIP), universal credit (UC), employment and support allowance (ESA),disability living allowance (DLA). Claims, assessments...
www.benefitsandwork.co.uk
stefbenstead.bsky.social
West Midlands Combined Authority and Sheffield City Region
stefbenstead.bsky.social
My latest blog, covering Health-Led Employment Trials.
At WMCA, 25% T vs 27% C entered work; at SCR it was 22% vs 18%. Financial returns were negligible; economic returns uncertain.
Strengthening the labour market and improving health may have more impact.
www.stefbenstead.co.uk/post/evidenc...
Evidence that Labour is ignoring: the Health-Led Employment Trials
My last blog post covered the Work and Health Programme (W&HP) for disabled people who had been “identified as being capable of finding work within a year of starting the programme”. In that study, on...
www.stefbenstead.co.uk