Britain | The costs of benefits

A growing number of Britons are on disability benefits

The government’s attempts to cut the welfare bill miss the bigger picture

People, a house, a pound sign and hospital visual being lifted by a tornado
Illustration: Rose Wong
|NORTHAMPTON

In a community centre in Northampton, a town in central England, a group of mental-health patients are learning how to navigate the benefits system. A young mother with psychosis wants to know how a new job will affect her payments; a man with severe anxiety struggles to support his autistic son. Their guide to the welfare state, an ex-adviser to the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), is sympathetic but slips unthinkingly into jargon. “Forgive me if I speak in TLAs,” he says.

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This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “The costs of benefits ”

From the May 4th 2024 edition

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