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Record 3.74m people are claiming disability benefits – with teens & young adults fuelling rise, figures reveal

Record 3.74m people are claiming disability benefits – with teens & young adults fuelling rise, figures reveal

The Sun5 hours ago

A RECORD 3.74 million people are now claiming disability benefits - with teenagers and young adults fuelling the rise, shock new figures reveal.
The number of people on Personal Independence Payment (PIP) has shot up by 200,000 in a year, according to official data.
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It's up from 3.54 million in April last year and nearly double the 2.05 million on the books in 2019.
Young claimants are also climbing fast, with 16 to 19-year-olds now making up 16.5 per cent of all PIP cases - up from 14.6 per cent in 2019.
There has been a similar rise for the 30-44 age group, which accounted for 21.0 per cent in April this year, up from 18.9 per cent in April 2019.
By contrast, 45-59 year-olds made up 29.9 per cent of claimants in April, down from 37.2 per cent in 2019.
The figure for 60-74 year-olds has risen slightly over this period, from 29.3% to 30.8 per cent.
The damning figures come as Sir Keir Starmer is standing firm in the face of a growing rebellion over his plans to tighten the eligibility for PIP.
The Welfare Reform Bill - alongside two impact assessments - will be published today, with a vote expected in late June or early July.
Dozens of Labour MPs have already warned the plans are 'impossible to support' – claiming the changes risk hitting hundreds of thousands of vulnerable people.
The reforms will see tougher rules brought in for new and existing claimants, with ministers hoping to slash £5 billion a year from the ballooning disability benefits bill.
It's understood that up to 800,000 people could lose access to PIP under the proposed changes, which are aimed at cutting back on awards linked to mental health conditions and other 'less visible' illnesses.
It was reported in recent days that Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall has agreed to include 'non-negotiable' protections in the Bill – including a 13-week grace period for people who no longer qualify, instead of payments stopping after just four weeks.
The move is seen as an attempt to head off a Labour rebellion, but one MP dismissed it as 'not very much really'.
Speaking at the weekend, the PM made clear his intention to push ahead with the reforms.
Asked whether there would be further concessions, Sir Keir said: 'Well we have got to get the reforms through and I have been clear about that from start to finish.
'The system is not working, it's not working for those that need support, it's not working for taxpayers.
'Everybody agrees it needs reform, we have got to reform it and that is what we intend to do.'

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