Jobcentres

Thirty-Sixth Report of Session 2024–25

Author: Committee of Public Accounts

Related inquiry: Jobcentres

Date Published: Wednesday 2 July 2025

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Contents

Summary

Work coaches in jobcentres play a critical role working with benefit claimants to identify their needs and provide support. Members of the Committee have seen first-hand the valuable work they do to help people find employment and progress in work.

However, the Department for Work and Pensions (the Department) has not had enough work coaches to meet the need for support, with a shortfall of 2,100 (10.9% of total need) in the first six months of 2024–25. To help deal with the shortage, more than half (57%) of jobcentres have reduced the support they provide – for example, work coaches have had shorter meetings with claimants or met them less often. We are not convinced by the Department’s seemingly complacent assurances that this reduction in support has had minimal impact on claimants.

The performance of jobcentres has declined in the past two years – the proportion of Universal Credit claimants with the lowest earnings who move into work each month dropped from 9.7% in 2021–22 to 8.2% in 2023–24. While the Department aims to provide a nationally consistent service, Outcomes for claimants vary depending on where they live. It is likely that this is because, despite the Department aiming to provide a nationally consistent service, there is substantial variation in performance across the seven jobcentre regions and 37 districts.

Against this challenging background, the Department is about to implement major changes to the system of employment support which are likely to increase the demand on jobcentres. The changes include a new integrated jobs and careers service, which will be available to anyone who wants help, and providing more support to help claimants of health and disability benefits get into work. The jobcentre system needs to improve, and we are supportive of ambitious change and innovative approaches where they are needed. To get the system working effectively, the Department also needs the right resources – it has £55 million in 2025–26 to test new approaches but has not had the funding for the work coaches it needs to support claimants day to day.

As it designs and implements the reformed service over the coming years, the Department must not lose focus on supporting claimants who need help now. And, while we welcome the work that the Department has underway to test elements of the new service and the success stories that it shared with us, the Department will need robust evidence of a transformed and improved service operating at scale to assure us that the reforms are achieving their intended impact.

This Committee has regularly criticised poor evaluation and modelling of expected benefits as this causes lack of understanding in government about what is effective in many policy areas. Given the pressures on public spending and the poor health and wellbeing outcomes for those left out of work, ineffective support for people seeking jobs is not something the country can afford.

Introduction

The Department for Work and Pensions (the Department) relies on its network of 646 jobcentres across Great Britain to help people seeking employment or wanting to progress in work. In 2023–24, the Department spent £1.2 billion on jobcentres (excluding estates, digital and other corporate costs), with staff costs comprising 93% of this total.

Within each jobcentre, work coaches play a critical role working directly with Universal Credit claimants to identify their needs and provide support. The Department uses six labour market categories to determine the support claimants receive, based on their earnings and personal circumstances. In October 2024, there were 7.2 million people claiming Universal Credit. Of these, 2.5 million were below the earnings threshold where the Department can impose conditions on their claim, such as a requirement to meet regularly with a work coach.

In November 2024, the government published a white paper, Get Britain Working, with a long-term ambition of an 80% employment rate. The white paper set out plans for reforming employment support including a new jobs and careers service, bringing together jobcentres with the National Careers Service in England. The government followed this, in March 2025, with a green paper, Pathways to Work, which set out proposals to reform health and disability benefits and employment support, with the aim of helping more disabled people and people with health conditions to work.

Conclusions and recommendations

1. The Department seems complacent about the impact that the reduction in support caused by the shortage of work coaches may be having on claimants. The Department has not had enough work coaches to meet the need for support in recent years. In the first six months of 2024–25, for example, it had 2,100 (10.9%) fewer work coaches than it estimated it needed. To help deal with the shortfall, the Department allows jobcentres to reduce the support they provide for claimants when the caseload of their work coaches is too high. In September 2023, it introduced a local flexibility framework which sets out measures that jobcentres can implement, such as shortening the initial meeting with claimants from 50 to 30 minutes. More than half (57%) of jobcentres have used the framework at some point to manage their workload. The Department says we should not be concerned about the reductions in support because it has minimised the impact on claimants by focusing the reductions on the things that it thinks make the least difference to outcomes, primarily getting people into work. We note, however, that the into-work rate declined from 9.7% in 2021–22 to 8.2% in 2023–24, and third-sector organisations raised concerns with us about the quality and consistency of the support offered to claimants. The Department is considering making some of the measures in the framework permanent changes.

recommendation
The Department should evaluate the impact on claimants of jobcentres implementing measures from its local flexibility framework, and share the results with the Committee, before making any of the measures permanent changes.

2. We are concerned that the Department will continue to not have enough work coaches to meet the growing demand for support. The shortage of work coaches has been caused by the Department securing inadequate funding from HM Treasury and by recruitment and retention challenges. Looking ahead, the demand for work coach support is expected to continue to increase and claimants’ needs are expected to become more complex. The proposals for reform set out in the November 2024 white paper and the March 2025 green paper have significant implications for jobcentres. They include setting up a new jobs and careers service as a universal service not just support for benefit recipients, and providing tailored employment, health and skills support for claimants with a work-limiting health condition or disability. The Department envisages a ‘pyramid’ of support where many people will be able to access and self-serve using digital services, what it called a ‘jobcentre in your pocket’. It foresees that this will help to free up jobcentre resources to provide face-to-face support to those who need it. However, the Department acknowledges that redeploying 1,000 work coaches in 2025–26, to provide intensive support to around 65,000 people with health conditions and disabilities, will reduce the support available for other Universal Credit claimants.

recommendation
The Department should develop a workforce plan within twelve months and as part of its work to design and set up the new jobs and careers service. The plan should include details of the steps that the Department will take to make sure it has enough work coaches to provide face-to-face support to people who need it.

3. The Department does not publish data on work coach numbers or into-work rates, which means it is not clear how well local jobcentres are supporting claimants to work. The Department publishes data on its Stat-Xplore platform relating to the number of claimants in each Universal Credit labour market category at jobcentre level. It does not, however, publish data on work coach numbers compared with need or on jobcentre performance in helping people move into work. The NAO report presented work coach data for the Department’s seven regions and performance data for the regions and for the 37 districts. These data show substantial variation between different parts of the country. For example, from December 2023 to November 2024, the district into-work rate ranged from 5.5% in Birmingham and Solihull to 10.8% in Northern Scotland. There is also variation in the shortfall of work coaches at jobcentre level, and the Department seeks to manage the impact of the variation by having jobcentres with more work coaches support those with fewer.

recommendation
The Department should set out how it will increase transparency around jobcentres, for example by regularly publishing jobcentre level data on its Stat-Xplore platform, including data on work coach numbers against need and into-work rates. This regular reporting should start before the end of 2025.

4. The Department has not evaluated the effectiveness of its approach to supporting claimants to work for a decade. The Department does not have an up-to-date evidence base from which to assess the suitability of its current approach to supporting claimants to work. Its most recent evaluation is from 2015, before Universal Credit was rolled out. The Department considers it to be challenging to develop a new evidence base using randomised control trials, which it describes as the gold standard, bearing in mind how long it takes to carry out the trials and get the results. It is currently assessing alternative arrangements for delivering its services, where possible using randomised control trials. Specifically, it is testing using video and other channels rather than face-to-face communication, and reducing the frequency of work coaches’ engagement with claimants. It expects the results of these trials to be available between June 2025 and November 2026. The Department is also comparing and contrasting the evidence that it gathers over shorter time periods – for example, it is using its core support model in one place and a different approach in another place thereby creating groups of claimants that it can compare. It wants to get test results quickly in order to help develop the new jobs and careers service.

recommendation
The Department should, within six months, publish its strategy for evaluating the impact of its reforms to the employment support system and for refreshing its evidence base regularly.

5. It is not fully clear how the Department is spending the £55 million allocated for 2025–26 to test elements of the new jobs and careers service. In the 2024 Autumn Budget, the government allocated £55 million for the Department to invest in developing and testing elements of the jobs and careers service in 2025–26. The Department is spending some of this money on a coaching academy to upskill its work coaches, on ‘pathfinder projects’ in some parts of the country and on developing digital services, but has not yet allocated all of the £55 million. The Department says that funding is available for good proposals coming forward from different parts of the organisation. But it did not indicate how much of the £55 million has so far been committed and how much is left to be allocated. We are now several months into the financial year so it is important that the Department works out quickly how to make best use of the funding, rather than making rushed decisions at the last minute.

recommendation
Alongside its Treasury Minute response, the Department should write to us setting out how much of the £55 million has been committed and what its plans are for using the remainder of the money.

6. Achieving an employment rate of 80% is likely to be very challenging. The Government’s long-term ambition is to achieve an employment rate of 80%. This would represent a considerable increase – from May 2018 to October 2024, the employment rate fluctuated between 74.3% and 76.4%. The Department says that in some local areas the 80% employment rate is already being achieved. Its focus will be on those areas with a much lower employment rate, and the characteristics of the individuals in those areas. In April 2025, the Department published eight metrics focusing on places and groups with employment rates of less than 80%, which it will use to track performance in the context of the reforms set out in the 2024 white paper. For example, there is a metric about reducing the gap between the median employment rate and the bottom 10% in terms of localities, plus other metrics that are about characteristics, such as bringing down the health-related inactivity rate and reducing the proportion of young people not in education, training or employment. The Department has said it will publish data on these metrics annually, starting in October 2025.

recommendation
The Department should, within six months:

a. work with other departments to publish a roadmap for achieving the government’s long-term ambition of an 80% employment rate; and

b. set out the specific contribution of jobcentres to this ambition, including the arrangements for monitoring their performance.

1 Availability of work coaches and support

Introduction

1. On the basis of a report by the Comptroller and Auditor General, we took evidence from the Department for Work and Pensions (the Department) on jobcentres.1

2. The Department aims to help people move into work and to support those already in work to progress, with the aim of increasing overall workforce participation. Its outcome delivery plan for 2023 to 2025 included an objective to maximise employment, reduce economic inactivity, and support the progression of those in work.2

3. The Department relies on its network of 646 jobcentres across Great Britain, organised into seven regions and 37 districts, to help people seeking employment or wanting to progress. In 2023–24, the Department spent £1.2 billion on jobcentres (excluding estates, digital and other corporate costs), with staff costs comprising 93% of this total. Within each jobcentre, work coaches play a critical role working directly with Universal Credit claimants to identify their needs and provide support.3

4. The Department tailors its support for Universal Credit claimants, based on their earnings and personal circumstances. The Department uses six labour market categories to determine the support Universal Credit claimants receive.4 In October 2024, there were 7.2 million people claiming Universal Credit. Of these, 2.5 million were below the earnings threshold where the Department can impose conditions on their claim – 1.6 million in what the Department calls the ‘Intensive Work Search’ category and 0.9 million in the ‘Light Touch’ category. Conditions can include undertaking a specified number of hours of activity to prepare for and look for work, and meet regularly with a work coach in a jobcentre.5

5. In November 2024, the government published a white paper, Get Britain Working, with a long-term ambition of an 80% employment rate. The white paper set out plans for reforming employment support including creating a new jobs and careers service, bringing together jobcentres with the National Careers Service in England.6 The government followed this, in March 2025, with a green paper, Pathways to Work, which set out proposals to reform health and disability benefits and employment support, with the aim of helping more disabled people and people with health conditions to work.7

Having enough work coaches to meet the demand for support

6. The Department has not had enough work coaches to meet the demand for jobcentre support in recent years. In 2022–23, it had 2,300 (13.2% of total demand) fewer work coaches than it estimated it needed. This shortfall decreased to 1,400 (8.6%) in 2023–24, before increasing to 2,100 (10.9%) on average in the first six months of 2024–25. The shortfall in work coaches was due to a combination of factors including that the Department, in its funding settlement with HM Treasury, secured funding for fewer work coaches than it estimated it needed to meet demand, as well as challenges with recruiting and retaining staff.8

7. For the first six months of 2024–25, the Department assessed it would need on average 18,900 work coaches but had funding for between 17,600 and 18,000.9 The Department told us it forecasts demand on a six-monthly cycle but plans resource over a longer timeframe – funding for 2024–25 was originally set in November 2021. It also said it has a judgement to make on resourcing, to balance work pressures facing jobcentres against the pressures in other service lines.10 The Department pointed to Figure 5 in the NAO report which shows the Department had fewer work coaches than it estimated it needed over the period April 2022 to September 2024, with the exception of May 2022. Despite this, the Department told the committee it has been able to meet the broad trend of demand over the last 12 months while acknowledging it may never have the right number of work coaches in any one place.11

8. The Department has also had fewer work coaches than it has had funding for, which it attributed to factors such as challenges with recruiting and retaining staff. The turnover rate for the Department’s executive officers working in jobcentres, including work coaches, was 8.5% in 2023–24.12 The Department told us that it takes a national and local approach to recruitment, including using local employment forums and specialist websites.13 The Department told us it tended to see higher attrition in those areas where there are buoyant labour markets.14 It explained that retention issues were around salaries and the availability of other roles locally.15 It cited examples of what it is doing to improve retention, including through performance management to make sure that teams know what is expected of them, and leadership development so that teams feel invested in.16

9. In November 2024, the government published its Get Britain Working white paper that set out plans for reforming employment support including a new jobs and careers service, bringing together jobcentres with the National Careers Service in England. The Department aims to create a universal service that will provide support for anyone who is looking to work, to get on in work, change career or retrain, not just claimants by 2028–29.17 This includes customers who do not use the jobcentre at the moment, including people with health conditions and people who are not on benefits at all but who need help finding a job.18

10. We asked the Department how realistic its plan is for a universal jobs and careers service given the current shortage of work coaches. The Department said it envisages a ‘pyramid’ with, at the top, a larger number of people who can access support and self-serve digitally and with minimal contact with a work coach. It described a fully online ‘jobcentre in your pocket’ which should complete roll-out in 2028. The Department also explained that, at the other end, it is about providing tailored support or signposting people to specialist support in local areas. Work coaches could then spend their time more intensively on those customers for whom a more in-depth conversation is more appropriate.19 The Department told us that tests carried out so far on its new fully online PIP claim service launched in July 2023 have shown initial decisions reached, on average, 20 days faster. Further work is needed to establish how far these technological and process changes will reduce overall processing times and improve services.20

11. In March 2025, the government published a green paper, Pathways to Work, which set out proposals to reform health and disability benefits and employment support, with the aim of providing tailored employment, health and skills support for claimants with a work-limiting health condition or disability.21 The Department plans to redeploy 1,000 existing work coaches in 2025–26 to provide intensive employment support to around 65,000 people with health conditions and disabilities.22 We asked the Department to what extent will the redeployment of 1,000 work coaches result in a further reduction in support available for other Universal Credit claimants. The Department acknowledged that the redeployment does do that.23

The impact of reductions in work coach support

12. To help deal with the shortfall in work coaches, the Department allows jobcentres that are under the most pressure in terms of work coaches’ caseload to reduce the support they provide for claimants. In September 2023, the Department introduced a local flexibility framework which sets out five measures that jobcentres can implement in order. For example, the first measure involves shortening the initial meeting with claimants from 50 to 30 minutes and the second measure is to reduce the frequency with which some claimants meet a work coach from weekly or fortnightly to monthly. The Department allows jobcentres to implement measures in the framework if their work coaches have a caseload of more than 110 cases and this position is forecast to continue for at least three months. From September 2023 to November 2024, more than half (57%) of jobcentres used the framework at some point to reduce the support they provide to claimants to help manage their workload.24

13. We asked the Department how concerned we should be that over half of jobcentres have had to reduce their support for Universal Credit claimants due to the shortage of work coaches. The Department told us that we should not be concerned because, where there are not enough work coaches, it has reduced the frequency of interventions in areas that it thinks make the least difference to outcomes, primarily the outcomes about getting people into work.25 The Department also told us that the impact that the reduction in support has had on claimants has been minimised because the flexibility framework preserves the core support and only focuses on activities that do not impact getting people into work. The Department referred to an evidence base to support that assertion but did not explain what that was.26 The most recent evidence for its central support model dates from 2015 and so did not cover Universal Credit claimants, which the Department rolled out for new claims nationwide in 2018.27

14. However, the Department also told us that it was concerned about the into-work rate, which has been declining since 2021–22.28 The rate increased to 9.7% in 2021–22, but declined in the following two years, to 8.2% in 2023–24. The Department said that external factors, like the labour market and the fall in the number of vacancies, are were making it more difficult and leading to a reduction in into-work rates.29 It also said that work coaches are seeing a more complex caseload, with customers who are further away from the labour market.30

15. The Department said that, even when implementing all the measures up to level five of its flexibility framework, including to meet all Intensive Work Search claimants fortnightly after 13 weeks rather than some of them weekly, its work coaches can still have quality conversations with claimants and achieve the same outcomes.31 However, in written evidence, third sector organisations raised concerns with us about the quality and consistency of support offered at jobcentres. Child Poverty Action Group and Changing Realities told us it has evidence that parents and carers using jobcentre services often do not receive the quantity or quality of support that they need.32 Education Development Trust stated that appointments with work coaches only last ten minutes which limits building lasting relationships and trust with claimants.33

16. The Department is examining whether some of the measures in the local flexibility framework could be made permanent to help manage demand pressures without adversely affecting outcomes for claimants.34 We asked the Department what measures could be made permanent and when. It said it would see what the impact of putting the measures in place is, it could then take a view about whether it wants to keep them in future.35

2 Jobcentre performance

The lack of public data on local jobcentre performance

17. The Department requires its jobcentres to provide a nationally consistent, centrally defined service that it judges will maximise employment and earnings for Universal Credit claimants.36 In November 2023, the Department introduced a new performance framework to monitor the operation of its jobcentres. The framework includes six key performance indicators of particular relevance to jobcentres’ role in supporting people to work. The only one of the indicators with data held before November 2023 is the into-work rate. The into-work rate measures, based on earnings, the proportion of Universal Credit claimants in the Intensive Work Search category who move into work each month, having not been in work in the previous month.37

18. In terms of the performance of jobcentres over time, the average monthly into-work rate reduced during the COVID-19 pandemic from 8.8% in 2018–19 to 7.2% in 2020–21. The rate then increased to 9.7% in 2021–22, but declined in the following two years, to 8.2% in 2023–24.38 There is substantial variation in performance across the Department’s seven jobcentre regions and 37 districts. At regional level, in the 12 months from December 2023 to November 2024, Southern England had the highest average monthly proportion of Universal Credit claimants moving into work (8.7%) while London and Essex had the lowest proportion (7.3%). At district level, Birmingham and Solihull had the lowest average monthly into-work rate at 5.5% and Northern Scotland had the highest at 10.8%.39

19. We asked the Department how concerned it was about the drop in the into-work rate nationally in the last two years and what the reasons are for the decrease. The Department told us it was concerned but that there are external factors that impact the into-work rate, including job vacancy numbers, which it said correlated with the increase in the into-work rate after the COVID-19 pandemic.40 It also explained that it is seeing a more complex caseload which will impact the into-work rate, such as claimants with health conditions and disabilities.41 The committee notes though that the into-work rate relates only to claimants in the intensive work search category, it excludes claimants with no work-related requirements, including due to health conditions and disability.42

20. We asked the Department why it does not publish information at a more granular level, particularly relating to the shortfall of work coaches. The Department told us that there is a lot of data available on its Stat-Xplore platform including data about Universal Credit caseload at jobcentre level.43 In written evidence provided after our evidence session, the Department provided the Committee with data on the number of claimants in each Universal Credit labour market category for the Weymouth jobcentre.44 The Department does not, however, publish data on work coach numbers compared with need or on jobcentre performance in helping people move into work, which the NAO obtained from unpublished management information.45 The Department said it has a huge amount of data, a lot of which it includes in its annual report and accounts, and it is just a question of what to publish.46

21. We followed this up by asking whether within districts there are areas that are performing better. The Department confirmed that within districts there is variation in headcount numbers at jobcentre level.47 The Department emphasised that it manages performance and attrition at all levels and that there is collaboration between jobcentres within clusters and districts. It explained that, where there is a shortfall in work coaches, other jobcentres are helping. For example, it asked jobcentres in Scotland to support jobcentres in the Southern and London and Essex regions with non-core activities that could be done virtually. It said this helped to smooth resource but also created the opportunity for learning between jobcentres.48

Evaluating the effectiveness of jobcentre support

22. The Department designed its central support model at jobcentres based on evaluations it carried out from 2005 to 2015. These evaluations were randomised control trials that assessed the impact of adjusting aspects of the meetings between claimants and work coaches.49 The Department acknowledges that there are limitations in the evidence base. Its trials covered Jobseeker’s Allowance claimants and did not cover claimants of Universal Credit, which it rolled out for new claims nationwide in 2018.50

23. We asked the Department why its evidence base for its current model for supporting claimants is so old. The Department told us it is challenging to develop a new evidence base using randomised control trials, which it describes as the gold standard, bearing in mind how long it takes to carry out the trials and get the results.51

24. The Department is working to enhance its evidence base and explore the impact of potential changes to its support model. It has carried out research to identify which aspects of work search review meetings between work coaches and claimants make them effective, including the effectiveness of different means of interaction for different groups of claimants. Where possible using randomised control trials, the Department is also assessing alternative arrangements for delivering its services. Specifically, it is testing the impact on outcomes for claimants when it allows work coaches to choose the channel of communication (face to face, telephone or video) for their weekly meetings with claimants, and when it reduces the frequency of appointments for some claimants in the first 13 weeks from weekly to three-weekly. The Department expects the results of these trials to be available between June 2025 and November 2026.52

25. We asked how the Department will make sure it provides a better service without evidence.53 The Department said it wants to conduct evaluations in a different way, to get test results quickly in order to help develop the new jobs and careers service. The Department said it is comparing and contrasting the evidence that it gathers by taking different approaches. It gave an example where it is using its core support model in one place and a different approach in another thereby creating groups of claimants for whom it can compare outcomes. The Department said it would use this approach to see if an intervention is less effective than the core regime, and if so it can be stopped.54

3 Planned reforms

The investment in reforms to employment support

26. In the 2024 Autumn Budget, the government allocated £55 million for the Department to invest in developing new digital services and testing elements of the jobs and careers service in 2025–26.55 We asked the Department what progress has been made in deciding how to use the extra £55 million in funding it had been allocated.56 It told us that it was spending some of the money on a coaching academy to upskills its work coaches on what the jobs and careers service is going to be, on its ‘pathfinder projects’ around parts of the country, and on developing digital services for the new jobs and careers service.57

27. The Department explained it has a phased approach to the jobs and careers service. It said its ‘pathfinder projects’ are part of the first phase, testing new ways of delivering its services. In phase two, in 2026–27, it told us it would roll out further the things it has tried that have worked.58 The Department told us, for example, that it is trialling putting work coaches in GP surgeries and engaging people outside of jobcentres. The Department referenced a success story from Poplar in London, where it has seen positive results of people having conversations with a work coach in a setting that is not the jobcentre and getting different types of support. It said that it has a presence in the GP surgery and community centre, and that it is running practical and skills classes. It stated that results in the Poplar example seems to be making a big difference for people who are long-term unemployed.59

28. The Department emphasised that its investment committee closely controls how it allocates the £55 million funding, and that it commits money for different proposals in packets. The Department also said, however, that it has not fully allocated the £55 million in extra funding, and that funding is still available for good proposals coming forward from different parts of the organisation. It also did not indicate how much of the £55 million has so far been committed and how much is left to be allocated.60

Implementing Government’s long-term ambition for an 80% employment rate

29. In its November 2024 white paper Get Britain Working, the government described its plans to reform employment support as the first steps to achieving its long-term ambition to achieve an 80% employment rate. From May 2018 to October 2024, the employment rate fluctuated between 74.3% and 76.4%.61

30. We asked the Department how big a challenge it will be to get to 80%. The Department told us that it clearly is a stretching aspiration. The Department explained that, to achieve an 80% employment rate, its focus is on areas and groups where the employment rate is below 80%, and that it is acting to narrow the gap through its planned reforms. It said that there are areas and localities with an 80% employment rate, but there are also some with a much lower rate.62

31. We asked the Department how it would measure the success of the new service and how it would measure the sustainability and quality of employment that people move into.63 In April 2025, the Department published Get Britain Working outcomes setting out eight outcome metrics that the government will monitor as it implements its reforms.64 The Department told us its eight metrics focus on the particular areas, groups and characteristics of individuals with a much lower employment rate than 80%. It has, for example, a metric about reducing the gap between the median employment rate and the bottom 10% in terms of localities. It also has other metrics that are about characteristics, such as bringing down the health-related inactivity rate and reducing the proportion of young people not in education, training or employment.65 The Department told us it plans to use these metrics to track performance and to identify where the barriers are as part of a place-based and characteristic-based strategy. The Department has said it will publish data on these metrics annually, starting in October 2025.66

Formal minutes

Thursday 26 June 2025

Members present

Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, in the Chair

Mr Clive Betts

Sarah Green

Chris Kane

Sarah Olney

Jobcentres

Draft Report (Jobcentres), proposed by the Chair, brought up and read.

Ordered, That the draft Report be read a second time, paragraph by paragraph.

Paragraphs 1 to 31 read and agreed to.

Summary agreed to.

Introduction agreed to.

Conclusions and recommendations agreed to.

Resolved, That the Report be the Thirty-Sixth Report of the Committee to the House.

Ordered, That the Chair make the Report to the House.

Ordered, That embargoed copies of the Report be made available (Standing Order No. 134).

Adjournment

Adjourned till Monday 30 June at 3.00 p.m.

Witnesses

The following witnesses gave evidence. Transcripts can be viewed on the inquiry publications page of the Committee’s website.

Thursday 15 May 2025

Sir Peter Schofield KCB, Permanent Secretary, Department for Work and Pensions; Katherine Green, Director General for Labour Market and Poverty Policy, Department for Work and Pensions; Barbara Bennett, Director General, Operations, Department for Work and PensionsQ1-77

Published written evidence

The following written evidence was received and can be viewed on the inquiry publications page of the Committee’s website.

JOB numbers are generated by the evidence processing system and so may not be complete.

1 Child Poverty Action Group; and Changing RealitiesJOB0003

2 Education Development TrustJOB0001

3 FedcapJOB0002

List of Reports from the Committee during the current Parliament

All publications from the Committee are available on the publications page of the Committee’s website.

Session 2024–25

Number

Title

Reference

35th

Introducing T Levels

HC 822

34th

Department for Business and Trade Annual Report and Accounts 2023-24

HC 818

33rd

Supporting the UK’s priority industry sectors

HC 1070

32nd

The Future of the Equipment Plan

HC 716

31st

Local Government Financial Sustainability

HC 647

30th

Antimicrobial resistance: addressing the risks

HC 646

29th

Condition of Government property

HC 641

28th

Decommissioning Sellafield

HC 363

27th

Government’s relationship with digital technology suppliers

HC 640

26th

Tackling Violence against Women and Girls

HC 644

25th

DHSC Annual Report and Accounts 2023-24

HC 639

24th

Government cyber resilience

HC 643

23rd

The cost of the tax system

HC 645

22nd

Government’s support for biomass

HC 715

21st

Fixing NHS Dentistry

HC 648

20th

DCMS management of COVID-19 loans

HC 364

19th

Energy Bills Support

HC 511

18th

Use of AI in Government

HC 356

17th

The Remediation of Dangerous Cladding

HC 362

16th

Whole of Government Accounts 2022-23

HC 367

15th

Prison estate capacity

HC 366

14th

Public charge points for electric vehicles

HC 512

13th

Improving educational outcomes for disadvantaged children

HC 365

12th

Crown Court backlogs

HC 348

11th

Excess votes 2023-24

HC 719

10th

HS2: Update following the Northern leg cancellation

HC 357

9th

Tax evasion in the retail sector

HC 355

8th

Carbon Capture, Usage and Storage

HC 351

7th

Asylum accommodation: Home Office acquisition of former HMP Northeye

HC 361

6th

DWP Customer Service and Accounts 2023-24

HC 354

5th

NHS financial sustainability

HC 350

4th

Tackling homelessness

HC 352

3rd

HMRC Customer Service and Accounts

HC 347

2nd

Condition and maintenance of Local Roads in England

HC 349

1st

Support for children and young people with special educational needs

HC 353


Footnotes

1 C&AG’s Report, Supporting people to work through jobcentres, Session 2024–25, HC 769, 31 March 2025

2 C&AG’s Report, para 1

3 C&AG’s Report, para 2

4 C&AG’s Report, para 7

5 C&AG’s Report, para 3

6 The Department for Work and Pensions, Get Britain Working, CP 1191, November 2024, paras 2, 10

7 The Department for Work and Pensions, Pathways to Work, CP 1297, March 2025, paras 4, 19-20

8 C&AG’s Report, paras 11, 2.12

9 C&AG’s Report, paras 11, 2.10, 2,12

10 Qq 17, 28

11 Q 17; C&AG’s Report, Figure 5

12 C&AG’s Report, para 2.12

13 Q 31

14 Q 32

15 Q 39

16 Q 32

17 The Department for Work and Pensions, Get Britain Working white paper, CP 1191, November 2024, para 146, Q 66

18 Q 58

19 Qq 56-58

20 Letter from the Department for Work and Pensions, 29 May

21 The Department for Work and Pensions, Pathways to Work, CP 1297, March 2025

22 The Department for Work and Pensions, Government bolsters employment support to unlock work for sick and disabled people, 06 March 2025

23 Q 63

24 C&AG’s Report, paras 2.17-2.20

25 Q 17

26 Qq 20, 21

27 C&AG’s Report, paras 8, 1.13

28 The into-work rate measures, based on earnings, the proportion of Universal Credit claimants in the Intensive Work Search category who move into work each month, having not been in work in the previous month.

29 Q 47; C&AG’s Report, para 15

30 Q 50

31 Q 21

32 JOB0003

33 JOB0001

34 C&AG’s Report, para 2.21, Q 19

35 Q 24

36 C&AG’s Report, para 1.11

37 C&AG’s Report, para 14

38 C&AG’s Report, para 15

39 C&AG’s Report, para 16

40 Qq 47, 50

41 Q 50

42 C&AG’s Report, para 3.8, Figure 11. There are 2.9 million Universal Credit claimants with ‘No work-related requirements’, which means the Department does not expect them to work or meet with a work coach because, for example, they are too ill, are over State Pension age, or have significant caring responsibilities (C&AG’s Report, Figure 3).

43 Q 34

44 Letter from the Department for Work and Pensions, 29 May

45 C&AG’s Report, Appendix One, paras 8-10, 13-14

46 Q 34

47 Qq 35-36

48 Q 36

49 C&AG’s Report, para 1.12

50 C&AG’s Report, para 1.13

51 Q 75

52 C&AG’s Report, para 1.14

53 Q 76

54 Qq 75, 76

55 C&AG’s Report, para 1.18

56 Q 71

57 Qq 43, 57, 71

58 Q 57

59 Qq 74, 76

60 Qq 72, 73

61 C&AG’s Report, para 1.15

62 Qq 68, 69

63 Qq 66-67

64 The Department for Work and Pensions, Get Britain Working outcomes, April 2025

65 Qq 68, 69

66 The Department for Work and Pensions, Get Britain Working outcomes, April 2025