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Progress in tackling pensioner poverty

Summary

This Report from the House of Commons Committee of Public Accounts ‘Department for Work and Pensions: progress in tackling pensioner poverty - encouraging take-up of entitlements’ (HC 169 2006-07) examines efforts by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) to increase the take-up of benefits by pensioners and looks at the reasons for unclaimed entitlements, the progress that has been made in encouraging the take-up of benefits since 2003 and the scope for further improvement.

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Law-Making Explained

This is a House of Commons Paper (HC 169 2006-07): it is a Report from the House of Commons Committee of Public Accounts.

Find out more about Select Committees.

How does it affect me?

If you work in the Pensions Service or are entitled to a pension and associated benefits, this affects you.

Findings include that despite considerable progress at the national and local level to tackle pensioner poverty, there are still over one million pensioners who are not claiming Pension Credits, almost a third of eligible pensioners. Low take-up rates are highlighted amongst older pensioners, those from ethnic minorities and those living in rural areas.

The Pension Service needs to improve its co-ordination of partnership work with other health and housing service providers and local groups and, given the complexity of the benefits system, the DWP needs to develop a target relating to take-up rates for Attendance Allowance and a system that would allow pensioners to claim linked benefits through a single transaction.

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Read more about pensions on the Department for Work and Pensions website .

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