HL Deb 10 June 1980 vol 410 cc422-3WA
Baroness FAITHFULL

asked Her Majesty's Government:

Whether they will bring up to date the Parliamentary Answer showing the number of people drawing means-tested benefits (Official Report 16th January 1979, cols. 946–948) by giving the comparable figures for 1978.

Lord CULLEN of ASHBOURNE

The information requested is shown in the following table:

NUMBERS OF PEOPLE RECEIVING CERTAIN MEANS-TESTED BENEFITS IN GREAT BRITAIN, 1973–1978
Thousands
1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978
Supplementary Benefit(1)
No. of claimants 2,675 2,680 2,793 2,940 2,991 2,932
No. of wives 549 538 564 614 611 584
No. of children 798 874 1,078 1,172 1,156 1,082
All claimants and dependants 4,022 4,092 4,434 4,725 4,759 4,598
Family income supplement(2)
No. of claimants 95 70 60 77 89 81
No. of wives 50 32 28 42 51 44
No. of children 221 161 135 176 205 183
All claimants and dependants 336 261 223 295 345 308
Rent rebates and allowances(3)
No. of rebates 1,930 2,087 2,160 2,382 2,423 2,322
No. of allowances 235 333 400 616 614 565
Rate rebates(4)
No. of rebates 1,110 2,630 2,930 3,020 3,090 2,987
Free school meals(5)
No. of children receiving free school meals:
in England and Wales 795 750 784 839 997 1,159
in Scotland 137 130 122 117 118 156
in Great Britain 932 880 906 956 1,115 1,315
Notes:
(1) Supplementary Benefit: source—supplementary benefit annual statistical inquiry in November or December each year.
(2) Family income supplement: source—10 per cent. statistical sample at December of each year.
(3) Rent rebates and allowances: source—Department of the Environment, relating to October of each year. The figures include supplementary benefit recipients who received direct rebates and allowances up to 31st March 1974 and, except for recipients in Scotland in 1978, indirect rebates and allowances since that date. Estimates of family composition are not available.
(4) Rate rebate: source—Department of the Environment, relating to March of each year. The estimates are for the number of house holds receiving a rate rebate and include those few who may be receiving supplementary benefit for a short-term transitional period. The slight decrease in numbers is mainly attributable to the effects of the Scottish rating revaluation in 1978 which resulted in a shift of the rate burden from the domestic sector to the industrial sector. Estimates of family composition are not available.
(5) Free school meals: source—Department of Education and Science census at October of each year in respect of England and Wales; Scottish Education Department census at January of each year in respect of Scotland. The figures are for number of children receiving free school meals at the stated dates; estimates of family composition are not available.
(6) All figures relate to Great Britain except where explicitly stated to the contrary and are rounded to the nearest thousand. Because of rounding component figures may not add up to the total.