benefits
Benefit fraud accounts for just 0.7 per cent of welfare spending, new figures show
Benefit fraud accounted for just 0.7 per cent of welfare spending in 2013/2014, according to new government figures published today.
The anti-immigration voices have lost the economic argument
The economics of immigration are unambiguous: the anti-immigration voices have lost the argument and should move on.
Austerity (still) won’t balance the books
Austerity not only drives the growing inequality in our society, it drives the divisiveness that demonises the migrant, the welfare claimant or the public sector worker.
The myth of migrants ‘flocking’ to Britain’s ‘soft touch’ benefits system
The desire to 'get on' isn't confined to affluent Westerners.
Exclusive: An open letter to Iain Duncan Smith: Universal Credit questions that need answering
Existing problems with Universal credit risk being replicated unless you resolve them.
Disabled people know what it will take to help them into work. Will Labour listen?
Labour must prove it has changed its spots since the days of hiring Lord Freud as welfare reform adviser under Tony Blair.