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Chamber and committees

Changes to Pension Credit Could Cost Mixed-age Couples £7,320 Annually

  • Submitted by: Kenneth Gibson, Cunninghame North, Scottish National Party.
  • Date lodged: Thursday, 24 January 2019
  • Motion reference: S5M-15570
  • Current status: Taken in the Chamber on Thursday, 09 May 2019

That the Parliament condemns the UK Government’s decision that, from 15 May 2019, newly-retired people whose partners are younger than the state retirement age of 65 will no longer be able to claim pension credit (PC) and must instead claim universal credit (UC) along with their partners; understands that the couple rate of UC is £114.81 a week, compared with £255.25 for a couple receiving PC, which amounts to a potential loss of £7,320 a year; believes that this change could have a devastating impact on couples finances, health and wellbeing and increase the number of older people in poverty; considers that, if the change comes into force, couples might find themselves in the position of being financially better off if they split up and live apart; is disappointed that the changes were set out in a written statement by Parliamentary Secretary for Pensions and Financial Inclusion, Guy Opperman MP, which was published online on the evening of 14 January 2019; believes that this allowed the announcement to go through largely unnoticed due to the Brexit vote, and notes the calls for the UK Government to reconsider this decision, which, it believes, could drive many older people and their partners in Cunninghame North, Scotland and across the UK into poverty.


Supported by: Clare Adamson, Alasdair Allan, Tom Arthur, Angela Constance, Bob Doris, Neil Findlay, Jenny Gilruth, Christine Grahame, Mark Griffin, Emma Harper, Bill Kidd, Richard Lyle, Fulton MacGregor, Gillian Martin, John Mason, Stuart McMillan, Pauline McNeill, Alex Neil, Willie Rennie, Alex Rowley, Elaine Smith, Colin Smyth, Stewart Stevenson, David Torrance, Maureen Watt, Sandra White