Financial help for carers urged - News in brief - Evening Standard
       

Financial help for carers urged

The benefits system for unpaid carers is outdated and the Government should provide extra financial help to support them, MPs said.

The Commons Work and Pensions Select Committee said people who care for relatives and friends saved the taxpayer an estimated £87 billion every year.

Their support was of "critical importance" to the Government and they should receive more assistance, the committee said.

Its latest report, Valuing and Supporting Carers, recommends income replacement for those who have to work part-time or are unable to work because of their commitments, and compensation for the extra costs incurred from providing "intensive" caring roles.

The MPs say they are "disappointed" the Government had not directly addressed financial help for carers in its Carers Strategy and that the group were only identified as a long-term priority from 2011.

Carers struggled to remain in work because of a lack of affordable, reliable and flexible care services and they often suffered "opportunity penalties", finding their vocational skills became rusty and out of date.

The committee's report said: "We believe that the current system of benefits for carers is outdated and we recommend the introduction of two distinctive 'tiers' of support for carers, offering income replacement support for carers unable to work, or working only part-time, and compensation for the additional costs of caring for all carers in intensive caring roles."

They continued: "We believe that the Department for Work and Pensions should support adults who become carers during their working lives to combine work and care and enable those who wish to return to paid work when caring ends or changes to do so."

Labour MP Terry Rooney, who chairs the committee, said: "Caring matters deeply to individuals, families and society in general. Sustaining the ability of carers to provide the care and support they give to others is of critical importance.

He added: "DWP needs to provide adequate financial support for those who provide care when of working age, either by compensating them for the extra costs of caring, or, if they need to give up work to care, through adequate income replacement and pension protection mechanisms."

News in brief in Pictures

Don't Miss
The Glamour Awards - stars turn on the style

Glamour Awards

Stars turn on the style
Duchess of Cambridge is pretty in pink at her first Buckingham Palace garden party

Garden party

Duchess of Cambridge is pretty in pink
FIRST review of Ridley Scott's latest sci-fi blockbuster Prometheus

First review

Is Ridley Scott's Prometheus any good?
Fair-weather goths

Fair-weather goths

The sultry shades of summer darks are coming out of the shadows
London gets ready for the Diamond Jubilee - in pictures

Diamond Jubilee

London gets ready - in pictures
Dog save the Queen: Corgis surge in popularity

Dog save the Queen

Corgis surge in popularity
'He’s a better ex than he was a husband', says Boris Johnson's ex wife

A better ex than husband

We talk to Boris Johnson's ex wife
TV Baftas - in pictures

Best of the Baftas

Stars on the red, white and blue carpet
You big softie: Has Giles Coren put down his poison pen?

You big softie

Has Giles Coren put down his poison pen?
Pop star Paloma Faith, former Labour minister and Tory blogger back gay marriage video

Gay marriage

Pop star, former Labour minister and Tory blogger back gay marriage video