One million of the worst-paid people in Britain will have to attend welfare caseworker assessments, and if they are deemed to be “not working enough,” they face having their benefits cut — even if no additional shifts are available to them. Of course, once their benefits are cut, they’ll be homeless and then (shortly) jobless, and they can get back on the rolls. So it’s not completely daft.
DWP internal documents seen by the Guardian reveal that people earning between £330 and around £950 a month – just under the rate of the national minimum wage for a 35-hour week – could be mandated to attend jobcentre meetings where their working habits will be examined as part of the universal credit programme.
…However the department did confirm that docking social security payments for those who are categorised as “not working enough” formed part of their plans.
UK’s lowest-paid employees to be classed as ‘not working enough’