HC Deb 28 February 1985 vol 74 cc266-7W
Mr. Alfred Morris

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services (1) by how much expenditure has increased each year on cash benefits for disabled people introduced by the previous Government; and what have been the savings on such expenditure since the link with earnings was removed;

(2) what has been the increase in real terms in spending on cash benefits for disabled people other than that on benefits introduced by the previous Government;

(3) what was the increase in real terms in spending on cash benefits for disabled people in each of the years 1973–74 to 1983–84.

Mr. Newton

Expenditure on cash benefits for long-term sick and disabled people from 1973–74 to 1983–84 was as follows:

Year *Benefits introduced by the previous government 1974–79 †Other benefits
Cash £ million At 1983–84 prices £ million Cash £ million At 1983–84 prices £ million
1973–74 570 2,000
1974–75 740 2,220
1975–76 12 29 990 2,370
1976–77 44 91 1,160 2,410
1977–78 67 122 1,400 2,560
1978–79 120 202 1,660 2,790
1979–80 168 244 1,930 2,800
1980–81 238 297 2,260 2,820
1981–82 309 346 2,650 2,970
1982–83 398 417 3,080 3,220
1983–84 496 496 3,570 3,570
* Invalid care allowance, mobility allowance and non-contributory invalidity pension.
† Attendance allowance, industrial disablement benefit, invalidity benefit and the appropriate share of expenditure on war pension, supplementary benefit, housing benefit and the Christmas bonus. All figures rounded because of the imprecision arising from the need to apportion expenditure on the latter four benefits. Estimates of the additional expenditure that would have resulted if the link with the increase of prices or earnings whichever was the greater had been maintained would involve making assumptions about forecasts, the treatment of forecasting errors and about which benefits had been uprated by this method, which would make such figures meaningless.