personal finance

DWP 'taking immediate action' over '£130 Christmas bonus' for state pensioners


The DWP says it will ‘take immediate action’ over a £10 Christmas bonus due to be paid to people on benefits including state pensioners this year.

Every year since 1972, the Department for Work and Pensions has sent £10 to people on various benefits at Christmas, including Universal Credit, state pensioners and various other benefits include PIP.

But a petition has been set up over the £10 Christmas bonus, calling for the money to be increased to at least £130.

The bonus has never been changed since it was first introduced, meaning it has failed to keep up with inflation at all.

Now 20,000 people have signed a petition calling for the government to finally adjust the money to account for inflation.

The petition said: “The Christmas bonus was introduced in 1972. Since then, inflation has lowered the cost of the pound significantly, yet the £10 number remained the same. With inflation taken into account, the bonus should actually be around £130. We want the Government to account for inflation in these payments.

“The DWP Christmas bonus for benefit claimants is a measly £10 – hardly enough to cover the costs associated with holidays. It is almost insulting to be presented with an amount of money this small – the equivalent of 76p before inflation – when many of us are already living hand to mouth and in constant fear of getting our benefits reassessed or revoked. Disabled and low-income people deserve better.”

In response, the DWP said: “We are taking immediate action to turn around the dire inheritance we face – with more people living in poverty now than 14 years ago.”

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It said its plans include the extension of the Household Support Fund for the most vulnerable people, as well as reducing child poverty and raising wages for working people.



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