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29 Mar 2006 : Column 1015W—continued

Correspondence

Sir Michael Spicer: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions when the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State will reply to the letter of 31 January from the hon. Member for West Worcestershire. [57640]

Margaret Hodge [holding answer 29 March 2006]: I replied to the hon. Member on 27 March 2006.
 
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Child Support Agency

Mr. Laws: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions what the average time is for the Child Support Agency cases to spend in (a) the pre-application stage, (b) the application stage, (c) the information-gathering stage and (d) the calculation and collection set-up stage before first payment is received for (i) cases from parents with care receiving income support or income-related jobseeker's allowance, (ii) cases from parents with care not on income support or income-related jobseeker's allowance and (iii) all cases. [18787]

Mr. Plaskitt: The administration of the Child Support Agency is a matter for the chief executive. He will write to the hon. Member.

Letter from Hilary Reynolds:


Average time in days for new scheme new applications that have cleared various stages in the process to clear that particular stage in the process—December 2005 (scheme to date)

Application stage/intake typeMeanMedian
1st Contact to pre-application clearance
All cases4112
JCP intake3213
Private intake579
Pre-application clearance to calculation or other clearance
All cases12563
JCP intake15083
Private intake8741
Post calculation intake to post calculation clearance
All cases334
JCP intake384
Private intake284
Post calculation clearance to first payment
All cases6030
JCP intake5527
Private intake6435

 
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Average time in days new scheme child support applications that have yet to clear a stage in the application process have spent in that particular stage—December 2005 (scheme to date)

Application stage /intake typeMeanMedian
1st Contact to pre-application clearance
All cases404367
JCP intake615709
Private intake332201
Awaiting calculation or other clearance
All cases371305
JCP intake382311
Private intake342291
Awaiting post calculation clearance
All cases408360
JCP intake404350
Private intake414381
Awaiting first payment
All cases315214
JCP intake309205
Private intake323227




Notes:
1. Intake type refers to the parent with care's (PWC) benefit status at the time that their application is received, and not their current benefit status nor the status at the point when the case is cleared. The PWC's benefit status may change during the course of their application being processed and these figures make no provision to take account of such changes.
2. The pre-application stage is where a potential application is screened to establish whether it is valid. Pre-application clearance is where the case either progresses to the application stage, a reduced benefit decision (RBD) is applied, good cause is accepted, or the case is closed.
3. A case enters application stage where it has been accepted as valid at the pre-application stage. An application clearance occurs when a calculation is carried out, a RBD is subsequently applied, good cause is subsequently accepted or the case is subsequently closed.
4. A case enters post calculation stage where clearance at the application stage results in a calculation being carried out. Post calculation clearance is where a collection schedule is set up, an MD arrangement is set up immediately after calculation, a RBD is subsequently applied, good cause is subsequently accepted, the case is subsequently closed, or the calculation is classified as being a nil liability meaning that no further action is required.
5. The first payment stage is the time between a collection schedule being set up and a first payment being made to the PWC, or a maintenance direct arrangement being put in place. There are an additional 2,000 cases where payment was made to the PWC prior to a schedule or maintenance direct arrangement being agreed (i.e. voluntary payments), which have been excluded from the first table.
6. For those cases that do not result in a calculation, clearance of the overall application process can occur at any stage. Cases can also have cleared individual stages, but still be part way through the overall process. This means that, mathematically, neither the average time to clear the whole application process, nor the age of all uncleared cases can be obtained through summing the components presented in the table.
7. These figures do not include 84,000 cases received via the Jobcentre Plus interface that are yet to be processed, and for which we do not currently have sufficient management information for them to be included in this analysis.
8. In addition, analysis of clearance times excludes 104,000 cases received via the Jobcentre Plus interface that have been closed, or identified as a change of circumstance to an existing case (as opposed to a new application) as, again, we do not currently have sufficient management information for them to be included in this analysis.
9. Figures are rounded to the nearest day.





 
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Mr. Laws: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions what his estimate is of the (a) annual running costs of the Child Support Agency and (b) annual saving in benefits as a consequence of Child Support Agency maintenance payments for each year from 1996 to 2005; and if he will make a statement. [21586]

Mr. Plaskitt: The administration of the Child Support Agency is a matter for the Chief Executive. He will write to the hon. Member with the information requested. Letter from Stephen Geraghty:


£ million

Annual agency running costsAnnual savings in benefitsTotal maintenance collected
2004–05325.60117.40585.41
2003–04323.00141.30580.27
2002–03294.30146.50572.55
2001–02290.40137.50528.45
2000–01250.00143.00502.55
1999–2000260.30148.00460.68
1998–99231.20392.38
1997–98225.90306.16
1996–97224.50213.21
1995–96199.30134.45




Note:
Annual saving In benefit relates to maintenance collected passed to the Secretary of State rather than the parent with care.





 
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