- Asked by: Mark Griffin, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 05 September 2019
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Current Status:
Answered by Shirley-Anne Somerville on 18 September 2019
To ask the Scottish Government whether the Scottish Child Payment will be uprated, and, if so, what measure of inflation it will use.
Answer
The Scottish Government has given a commitment to uprate the Scottish Child Payment with inflation to ensure that its value always keeps up with rising prices, and provisions will be made for this in regulations.
On 2 September, we published a Policy Paper and Analytical Report, on the uprating measures that could be used to uprate devolved social security assistance. This can be found on the Scottish Parliament’s website: /S5_Social_Security/General%20Documents
/20190902_CabSecSSOP_to_Convener_uprating_measures.pdf .
The Social Security Committee and the Scottish Commission on Social Security have been asked to provide their views on the Scottish Government’s proposals for uprating by end October 2019.
These views will inform the decision on the uprating measure to be applied, in time for the Scottish Budget and prior to the laying of the legislation in the Scottish Parliament in January 2020.
- Asked by: Mark Griffin, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 05 September 2019
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Current Status:
Answered by Shirley-Anne Somerville on 18 September 2019
To ask the Scottish Government how much of the Scottish Child Payment will be made in respect of children in a household who have reached (a) the age of 16 and (b) the age of 16 and their 16th birthday was less than a year ago, and (i) are still in and (b) have left secondary education.
Answer
As set out in the policy position paper, by the end of 2022 the Scottish Child Payment will be paid to all eligible children under the age of 16.
- Asked by: Mark Griffin, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 05 September 2019
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Current Status:
Answered by Shirley-Anne Somerville on 18 September 2019
To ask the Scottish Government for what period an award of the Scottish Child Payment will be made.
Answer
Continued policy and delivery development is being undertaken on the Scottish Child Payment, including our intended approach to assessment periods. This will be set out in regulations, and these will be submitted to the Scottish Commission on Social Security for scrutiny in the autumn.
- Asked by: Mark Griffin, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 05 September 2019
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Current Status:
Answered by Shirley-Anne Somerville on 18 September 2019
To ask the Scottish Government how many additional staff Social Security Scotland expects to recruit in (a) total and (b) each band to support the delivery of the Scottish Child Payment, and what it estimates the overall cost of these additional staff will be.
Answer
The number of staff and grades required to support the delivery of Scottish Child Payment will depend upon an assessment of the impact of delivery of Scottish Child Payment, including staff resources. We will provide an update once the assessment has been completed.
- Asked by: Mark Griffin, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 05 September 2019
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Current Status:
Answered by Shirley-Anne Somerville on 18 September 2019
To ask the Scottish Government whether it will provide a full breakdown of its costing of the Scottish Child Payment set out in its position paper, and for what reason those costs are not detailed under a specific option in its Analysis of Options for the Income Supplement paper.
Answer
In the first full year of payments to under 6’s (2021-22) policy costs are expected to be around £70 million, rising to £180 million in the first full year of full roll-out to under 16’s (2023-24). The total establishment cost of the new payment to the end of this parliament, including implementation and administration, is estimated to be in the region of £32.5 million (across 2019-20 and 2020-21).
The information provided on pages 2 to 5 of the policy position paper demonstrates how the options examined in the Analysis of Options report informed our policy choices. As set out in the policy position paper, ‘having taken into consideration both the policy modelling and analysis, the delivery and timing implications and the impact on the existing Social Security Programme, we concluded that a refined version of Option 2, as set out in the analysis report, is one that balances the risks against the benefits.’
The detail of our chosen policy approach and the associated costs are set out in the policy position paper. The option we are taking forward most closely corresponds to Option 2(b) in the Analysis of Options.
- Asked by: Mark Griffin, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 05 September 2019
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Current Status:
Answered by Shirley-Anne Somerville on 18 September 2019
To ask the Scottish Government whether an entitlement to the Scottish Child Payment will cease when a child reaches their 16th birthday.
Answer
As set out in the Scottish Child Payment policy position paper, once fully rolled out (by the end of 2022) eligibility for the Scottish Child Payment will be on the basis of children aged under the age of 16.
- Asked by: Mark Griffin, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 05 September 2019
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Current Status:
Answered by Shirley-Anne Somerville on 18 September 2019
To ask the Scottish Government how it will continuously verify entitlement to the Scottish Child Payment on an ongoing basis, and how frequently it will do so.
Answer
As set out in the Ministerial statement on the Tackling Child Poverty Delivery Plan on 29 June, further work has been required to assess certain policy and delivery implications of the Scottish Child Payment.
As part of this work, we are considering a range of issues which includes assessment periods and verifying eligibility and entitlement. Our approach to this will be set out in regulations which we will submit to the Scottish Commission on Social Security in the autumn.
- Asked by: Mark Griffin, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 05 September 2019
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Current Status:
Answered by Shirley-Anne Somerville on 18 September 2019
To ask the Scottish Government what the (a) nominal and (b) real value of the Scottish Child Payment will be at 2019-20 prices when it is delivered (i) in 2021 and (ii) fully in 2022.
Answer
I refer the member to the answer to question S5W-25155 on 18 September 2019. All answers to written parliamentary questions are available on the Parliament’s website, the search facility for which can be found at .
- Asked by: Mark Griffin, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 05 September 2019
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Current Status:
Answered by Shirley-Anne Somerville on 18 September 2019
To ask the Scottish Government what the rate of the Scottish Child Payment will be for (a) each eligible child under six years of age, (b) each eligible child over six years of age but under 16, and (c) all eligible children under the age of 16 in (i) 2020-21, (ii) 2021-22, (iii) 2022-23 and (iv) 2023-24.
Answer
The initial rate of the Scottish Child Payment, when the first payments are made in 2020-21, will be £10 per week, per eligible child. Its rate in future years will be informed by the approach we take to the uprating of the devolved benefits which we are currently consulting on, prior to the laying of the legislation in the Scottish Parliament in January 2020.
When it is fully rolled out, the rate of the Scottish Child Payment will be the same for all eligible children, in each age group.
- Asked by: Mark Griffin, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Thursday, 05 September 2019
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Current Status:
Answered by Shirley-Anne Somerville on 17 September 2019
To ask the Scottish Government, in light of the comment in its Scottish Child Payment position paper, that “having to build interfaces with the suite of legacy benefits in mitigation of this risk was deemed to be too technically complex, time-consuming and not cost-effective, given that UC [Universal Credit] is designed to replace those systems”, whether it considered an automated delivery model for people in receipt of universal credit.
Answer
Such a model was considered. It was rejected for a number of reasons, including the technical complexity of designing it, the resulting risks to delivery of the other devolved benefits, and the ongoing uncertainty around delays to Universal Credit migration, which would have meant that clients awaiting migration would not be eligible to receive the Scottish Child Payment unless additional interfaces with legacy systems were also built.