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Incapacity Benefits: Fit to Work?

Mukul Devichand investigates the controversial new test that decides which of the long term sick is 'fit to work'. Are Britain's most vulnerable bearing the brunt of the cuts?

One of the most expensive benefits in Britain's welfare state is about to be drastically cut . More than 2.5 million British adults currently live on incapacity benefits but from October the coalition government has pledged to scrap them, declaring many people "fit for work." Burnley in Lancashire will be the first town in England to subject them to a controversial health test.

In The Report this week, Mukul Devichand investigates the test - which is already being used for new claims and is now being reviewed after complaints. It has already found over 70% of those who have completed the process fit for work, but is it going too far in its attempt to separate the idle from the genuinely sick?

The system being used involves extending the services of a private company which has been accused of sending severely disabled, and terminally ill, people into the work force during a recession. Incapacity benefit costs 拢12.5 billion a year and is often criticized for spreading a "sick note culture " in Britain.

Producer: Smita Patel.

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30 minutes

Last on

Thu 12 Aug 2010 20:00

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  • Thu 12 Aug 2010 20:00

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