Advertisement Freelancer group, IPSE’s Jordan Marshall said: “Self-employed people can be thousands of pounds worse-off each year under Universal Credit compared to full-time employees making a similar amount.
“This is because Universal Credit calculations don’t account for monthly fluctuations in self-employed income.
“IPSE is calling on the Government to use the delay in the roll-out to fix these flaws which punish the self-employed.
“Unless the system is reformed, Universal Credit will continue to sap the incentive to run your own self-employed business.”
Delay
The delay comes after Work and Pensions Secretary Amber Rudd steered away from seeking MPs' consent to move the total three million existing welfare claimants to Universal Credit.
Her department will instead pursue approval for plans for a pilot scheme to move an initial 10,000 people onto the all-encompassing benefit in July.
Ms Rudd will no longer seek the House of Commons' approval, in a vote due soon, to move all welfare claimants to Universal Credit until the pilot scheme is deemed a success.
The Prime Minister, Theresa May, insisted that it will be fully rolled out by 2023 as was originally intended.
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Susie Hughes © Shout99 2018
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