unite and the benefit cap: building a new data platform daniel brown & william baxter - dwp

18
UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Upload: georgina-byrd

Post on 27-Dec-2015

212 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform

Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Page 2: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Background

"This is the biggest reform of the welfare system in a generation,"

“Universal Credit is at the heart of the Government’s reforms”

Universal Credit

Income related JSAIncome related ESAIncome Support Working Tax CreditsChild Tax CreditsHousing Benefit

Page 3: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Key question:

“ Can we use existing administrative data to create an analytical dataset that will bring together all the key elements of Universal Credit”.

Page 4: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Data structure

UNITE

DWP HMRC LA

Source systems

Page 5: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

UNITE population?

• Includes Tax Credit, DWP and LA customers

• Over 18 million benefit claims

• Transformed to simulate Universal Credit

Page 6: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

UNITE population?

• But….

• Wider than Universal Credit

• 29 Million benefit spells

• Covers most DWP benefits

Page 7: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Challenges

• Household level

• Linking large amounts of data

• New benefits

• Quality assurance

Page 8: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Population

HMRC

DWP

HB

Universal Credit timeseries

Jan-11 Feb-11 Mar-11 Apr-11 May-11 Jun-11 Jul-11 Aug-11

Household

Individual

Page 9: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

• Universal Credit Caseloads/ migration

• Geographical analysis

• Interactions between legacy benefits

• Impact of UC on pensioners

• Benefit Cap

Page 10: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Benefit Cap: Background

• Introduced from April 2013 by a reduction to HB payments

• Cap (maximum limit) on the total amount of benefits that people can get ensures that unemployed families will not receive more in benefits than the average income for working families

• Expected limits:• £500 per week for households comprising couples and lone

parents

• £350 per week for single persons

Page 11: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Benefits in and out of scope

• LA administered benefits (Housing Benefit)

• DWP benefits (inc. JSA, ESA and Income Support)

• HMRC benefits (Child Tax Credit and Child Benefit)

• Exemptions will apply (Working Tax Credit, disability related benefits)

Page 12: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Building the Cap population dataset

HMRC DWP

HB

HB claimants only

Identify those who are in scope for the cap:

Apply exclusions - people with disablities, workers.

Identify families whose benefit income exceeds

the maximum cap amount.

63,000 families identified as being in scope for the benefit cap

Benefits Claimed Number of Families

%

All 52,900 84.1

LA & DWP 5,300 8.4

LA only 1,500 2.3

UniteFamilies claiming HB

Page 13: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Building the cap population dataset

• Use of a common identifier throughout (all data sources have already been matched to NINOs)

• Use of WTC to identify employment, CB data to identify number of dependent children and DLA to identify people with disabilities

• All benefit rates increased to allow for annual budget increases in the run up to April 2013

Page 14: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Supporting operations

• address matching from CIS to generate mailshot which was sent to over 80,000 individuals

• Provision of personal information to enable JCP offices and LA’s to offer employment support and housing advice

Page 15: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Amount capped based on benefit data to November 2011 compared to the Impact Assessment

Average Amounts Of Benefit Reduced For Assessment Units Affected By The Benefit Cap Policy

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

UC Data Extract (percentage*) Impact Assessment

Loss By £50 Band

Proportion of Capped Households, in 2013-

14

Over £150

£101 to £150

£51 to £100

Up To £50

43.40%

23.18%

13.22%

20.21% 17%

12%

26%

45%

Page 16: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Legend

PERCENT

up to 0.10

0.11 - 0.20

0.21 - 1.00

1.01 - 1.50

1.51 +

England and WalesHouseholds over the benefit cap, as a percentage of total households(excluding CTB)

Map produced by

IInnffoorrmmaattiioonn DDiirreeccttoorraattee

Regional Impacts

Page 17: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Limitations

It’s good but…as with any administrative data, not perfect:

• not real-time data• relies on data sharing gateways across

Government (not in place for MOD war pensions exemption)

• does not allow for modelling all exemptions (e.g. 12 months employment spells)

Page 18: UNITE and the benefit cap: building a new data platform Daniel Brown & William Baxter - DWP

Summary

• Built a new data platform across Government benefits

• Used for operational support for the introduction of the benefit cap

• Benefit data allows us to model many family characteristics

• Some limitations – e.g. timeliness • Will support evaluation, analysis and statistics

as well as operations