Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
World
Joseph Gerrard & Kate Lally

Man 'reliant on family to survive' after Universal Credit cut

A man who was made redundant during the pandemic says inadequate support has left him reliant on family to survive.

Paul Jackson, 40, says he is a "prisoner in his own home" and has had to resort to asking his mum for help.

Paul also says the government’s scrapping of the £20 Universal Credit pandemic uplift came at the worst possible time and showed politicians did not understand the plight of claimants.

READ MORE: Brazen cannabis selfie led to EncroChat drug supplier's downfall

His comments come weeks after the scrapping of the uplift, costing claimants more than £1,000 a year in the deepest overnight cut to benefits the welfare system has faced, reports Hull Live.

Mr Jackson, from Hull, said: "I’ve been on Universal Credit for a year, before that I worked in business development for a company providing apprenticeships and things like that.

“I was made redundant because of the pandemic, the company couldn’t place any apprentices in jobs for a year so the money dried up.

“So I applied for Universal Credit as soon as I got out of that job. I was in work for 10 years so this is my first experience of Universal Credit, it hasn’t been great.

“I was on disability benefits before, they weren’t as bad as this.

“It’s difficult to find a job I can do because I’m disabled, I haven’t been able to find anything.

“I can only really do office jobs, administration roles and things like that, most of the jobs available are manual work.

“To be fair my work coach has been brilliant with helping me to find jobs to apply for.

“But you never hear back from so many employers, I understand they’ll probably be busy but a lot of the time they don’t even acknowledge your application.

Mr Jackson said Universal Credit cuts had come at the worst possible time for claimants (PA)

“It can get disheartening, but it’s the same for everyone else on it.

“Making the money last is a struggle, I live on my own and I’ve got rent and bills to pay and I’ve got to buy food. Now that they’ve taken the extra £20 off it’s a nightmare.

“It’s crunch time now, I need to find something, at the moment I have about £20 a week to buy food and whatnot.

“If it wasn’t for my mum and sister helping me out I don’t know how I’d cope.

“I can’t even go on nights out with friends unless mum gives me a few quid. One of my uncles works for Citizens Advice so he helps me with job applications as well.

'I'm a prisoner in my own home'

“You’ve just got to get on with it, but the thought of not having enough money is always at the back of your mind.

“I can fall back on them, but for people who don’t have that it must be dire.

“We’re supposed to spend 35 hours a week searching for jobs but it’s impossible, there aren’t enough that I can apply for out there.

“If I was able bodied then I might be able to manage. So I’m basically a prisoner in my own home, stuck trying to find jobs to apply for.

“The government took away the uplift at the worst possible time, a lot of people like my sister are still working from home.

“Politicians don’t know what it’s like, they’re living in an ivory tower.

“They have no idea what it’s like to be on the poverty line, they say they understand how bad things are for us but they don’t have a clue.

“They’re taking £20 away from the people who need it the most then cut taxes for the rich."

Conservative ministers including Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Work and Pensions Secretary Therese Coffey said the £20 uplift was only temporary and that work would be available as the economy recovers.

The Chancellor also announced in his Budget speech the taper rate of Universal Credit would be lowered from 63p taken from every pound of benefits for hour worked to 55p.

Receive newsletters with the latest news, sport and what's on updates from the Liverpool ECHO by signing up here

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.