The housing benefit rate increase will only increase the number of affordable homes by a fraction, claims a Bureau of Investigative Journalism study, helping virtually no one.
The Government announced that the Local Housing Allowance rate, which has been frozen since 2016, would increase in line with the Consumer Price Index, giving claimants an extra £10 a month.
But the Bureau found that just 900 more properties were affordable under the increased rate, compared to the current one, after they applied it to more than 62,000 two-bed rental adverts in Great Britain from last September.
Overall, only seven per cent of the properties advertised at that time would have been affordable if the LHA increase had been applied then, up from 5.6 per cent under the current rate.
The government claims its move to unfreeze housing benefit rates after four years will help society’s most vulnerable people. Our extensive data shows it will in fact help virtually no one: https://t.co/quu5LCXtT9#HousingCrisis
— The Bureau of Investigative Journalism (@TBIJ) January 24, 2020
But both fall far below what LHA was intended to provide for claimants. The benefit was intended to ensure the bottom 30 per cent of the market was affordable for people on benefits. Even the end of the freeze, which was intended to save £1.3bn in cash terms in 2016/17, does not improve matters.