HC Deb 17 March 1975 vol 888 cc340-3W
Mr. D. E. Thomas

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if she will publish in the Official Report the numbers of working families in Wales living below the supplementary benefit level.

Mr. Alec Jones:

Estimates of the number of working families in Great Britain with incomes below the supplementary benefit level are based on Family Expenditure Survey data. The number of sample cases is too small to permit any reliable estimate to be made for Wales.

Mr. D. E. Thomas

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if she will publish in the Official Report the number of national assistance-supplementary benefit claimants for Wales in 1948 and the latest year available; and if she will break down this information in the same way as it is presented in Social Trends Number 4, table 50.

Mr. Alec Jones:

Comparable information is not available for years prior to 1951. That for 1951 and 1974 is as follows:

1974
1951 (provisional)
Retirement pensioners and national insurance widows aged 60 years and over 61,800 98,400
Others over pension age 5,700 6,500
Unemployed with national insurance benefit 3,800 5,100
Unemployed without national insurance benefit 2,600 15,300
Sick and disabled with national insurance benefit 11,900 8,100
Sick and disabled without national insurance benefit 12,200 12,500
Women under 60 with dependent children 4,200 14,500
National insurance widows under 60 10,500 3,900
Others 7,100 1,900
Total persons receiving supplementary benefit 119,800 166,400
—of whom wage stopped (unemployed) Not available 500

Mr. D. E. Thomas

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if she will publish in the Official Reportthe ordinary supplementary benefit rates, including rent, as a percentage of net average weekly earnings of male manual workers in Wales for each year since 1948.

Mr. Alec Jones:

Information for years prior to 1967 is not available. That for 1967 to date is as follows:

Year Singlehouseholder Marriedcouple
1967 39 53
1968 39 53
1969 38 52
1970 37 50
1971 38 52
1972 34 48
1973 32 45
1974 36 49

Mr. D. E. Thomas

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if she will publish in the Official Report the ordinary supplementary benefit rates, including rent, as a percentage of gross average weekly earnings of male manual workers in Wales for each year since 1948.

Mr. Alec Jones:

Information for years prior to 1967 is not available. That for 1967 to date is as follows:

Year Singlehouseholder Marriedcouple
1967 29 42
1968 29 42
1969 28 40
1970 26 38
1971 27 38
1972 25 37
1973 23 34
1974 25 36

Mrs. Bain

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if she will publish in the Official Report the number of national assistance-supplementary benefit claimants for Scotland in 1948 and the latest year available; and if she will break down this information in the same way as it is presented in "Social Trends" Number 4, table 50.

Mr. Alec Jones:

Comparable information is not available for years prior to 1951. That for 1951 and 1974 is as follows:

1974
1951 (provisional)
Retirement pensioners and national insurance widows aged 60 years and over 68,000 164,000
Others over pension age 9,400 10,500
Unemployed with national insurance benefit 6,200 9,700
Unemployed without national insurance benefit 8,900 35,100
Sick and disabled with national insurance benefit 14,900 10,300
Sick and disabled without national insurance benefit 17,000 18,700
Women under 60 with dependent children 5,800 25,100
National insurance widows under 60 11,200 5,200
Others 9,200 2,300
Total persons receiving supplementary benefit 150,600 281,000
—of whom wage stopped (unemployed) Not available 1,600

Mr. Robin F. Cook

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if she will publish in the Official Report the ordinary supplementary benefit rates, including rent, as a percentage of net weekly earnings of male manual workers in Scotland for each year since 1948, or the longest convenient period.

Mr. Alec Jones:

Information for years prior to 1967 is not available. That for 1967 to date is as follows:

Year Single householder Married couple
1967 36 51
1968 36 51
1969 36 51
1970 36 51
1971 39 53
1972 35 49
1973 33 46
1974 35 49

Mr. Robin F. Cook

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if she will publish in the Official Report the ordinary supplementary benefit rates, including rent, as a percentage of gross average weekly earnings of male manual workers in Scotland for each year since 1948, or the longest convenient period.

Mr. Alec Jones:

information for years prior to 1967 is not available.1967 to date is as follows:

Year Singlehouseholder Marriedcouple
1967 27 40
1968 26 39
1969 27 39
1970 26 38
1971 27 39
1972 26 38
1973 24 35
1974 24 35

1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974
Cohabitation cases investigated 209 256 327 398 493 538 523
Number of allowances withdrawn or reduced 104 103 121 128 155 180 208
Fictitious desertion cases investigated 60 50 97 110 91 94 101
Number of allowances withdrawn or reduced 35 27 40 45 32 43 41
Number of prosecutions authorised (cohabitation and fictitious desertion)* 53 31 28 31
* Separate figures for cohabitation and fictitious desertion cases are not kept on a regional basis.
† Not available.

Mr. Rifkind

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services how many beneficiaries have been thought to be cohabiting or claiming fictitious desertion in Scotland for each year since 1968, the

1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974
Cohabitation cases investigated 310 324 421 388 471 441 703
Number of allowances withdrawn or reduced 201 185 257 199 246 260 413
Number of completed prosecutions * 15 16 12 26 43 63
Fictitious desertion cases investigated 113 125 126 87 93 94 145
Number of allowances withdrawn or reduced 82 85 84 49 44 50 85
Number of completed prosecutions * 17 13 26 18 9 14
* Not available.

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