- Jul 10, 2003
- 27,945
The Council Tax is a bit of an odd one though. My Avenue of 14 houses are all in Council Tax Band B. I know all my neighbours - none actually 'need' the WFP, as they are all on okay pensions. So, again, not a perfect solution.
And I also didn't know until just now that the £300 that everyone talks about is only for over-80s. Under-80s only got £200. So, when we're bandying about figures, I guess really we should be saying £200-300 rather than a straight £300.
The problem is finding a level without introducing the huge costs of means testing this actual benefit, so you are reduced to simple measures, or blunt instruments. I have said all along that the benefits cut off is too low but Martin Lewis thinks that introducing the council tax bands A-C would reduce the savings from £1.9B to £1B next year. The figures need to be checked and verified (he talks of the allowance being £500 net, and I can't see where that comes from), but it's the nearest thing I have seen to an implementable solution.
As you point out it means that people who don't need it will still get it (my previously mentioned mum being one) but better to overpay than underpay. To my mind, the underlying problem still exists though in the people on low incomes who aren't claiming what they are entitled to