The Government are considering handing over Crisis Loans (those given to people in the direst of circumstances to get them by usually until benefits start up) to Credit Unions to manage and to allowe them to charge 2% A MONTH interest. The Crisis Loans are currently interest free, repayable at something like £1 a week and are an absolute lifeline to some.
Basically from what I can make out the government want to introduce loans to low income families at a more affordable rate than loan sharks, so the government can benefit commercially ?
CURRENT REPORT - http://www.dwp.gov.uk/consultations/...w-approach.pdf
Social fund research by Local goverment - http://www.lga.gov.uk/lga/aio/21731
Helping those in financial hardship: the running of the Social Fund; report by the Comptroller and Auditor General in 2005 - report removed from NAO sites.
Helping Those in Financial Hardship: The Running of the Social Fund
No related links
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Poor families' loan interest fear
The proposals would see credit unions taking control of crisis lending
Low-income households applying for emergency loans from the state could face interest rates of up to 26.8%.
Ministers are considering reforms to the social fund, which extends £500m a year in interest-free loans to some 1.2 million benefit claimants.
The Tories said they were acting like "loan sharks" by suggesting credit unions take over the lending facility and charge up to 2% per month interest.
The government said it wanted to make the fund more widely available.
A Department for Work and Pensions spokeswoman said: "The social fund provides affordable credit for people who need it.
"We are now exploring how we can make it more widely available to people in work as well as on benefits.
"We want to make sure people in need do not turn to illegal loan sharks who can charge interest of 1,000%."
[This] would have people in dire financial circumstances facing an annual APR which is more than twice the current rate of a subprime mortgage
Jenny Willott
Liberal Democrats
No decisions had been made and the government would do nothing to create difficulties for low-income families, she added.
The social fund was set up to help needy people, many of them elderly or disabled, meet the costs of items such as cookers, cots and funerals.
Details of the proposed changes were released in a consultation document.
It sets out how the new interest rate would see the average budgeting loan, of £433.30, incurring interest totalling £47.80.
This would take an additional four weeks to pay off, at the average loan repayment rate of £10.54 a week.
'Simply outrageous'
Shadow work and pensions secretary Chris Grayling said: "These proposals are simply outrageous.
"Thousands of people are losing their jobs every week, and it is nothing short of extraordinary that the Government's answer is to propose abandoning interest-free emergency loans, and start charging 27% a year instead.
"Gordon Brown and James Purnell are behaving like loan sharks."
Liberal Democrat work and pensions spokeswoman Jenny Willott said the proposal was "totally unacceptable".
"What the Government is proposing would have people in dire financial circumstances facing an annual APR which is more than twice the current rate of a sub-prime mortgage.
"Providing advice and information about savings and money management is all well and good but when people are so desperate that they need a crisis loan, it's just not the right time."
Basically from what I can make out the government want to introduce loans to low income families at a more affordable rate than loan sharks, so the government can benefit commercially ?
CURRENT REPORT - http://www.dwp.gov.uk/consultations/...w-approach.pdf
Social fund research by Local goverment - http://www.lga.gov.uk/lga/aio/21731
Helping those in financial hardship: the running of the Social Fund; report by the Comptroller and Auditor General in 2005 - report removed from NAO sites.
Helping Those in Financial Hardship: The Running of the Social Fund
No related links
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Poor families' loan interest fear
The proposals would see credit unions taking control of crisis lending
Low-income households applying for emergency loans from the state could face interest rates of up to 26.8%.
Ministers are considering reforms to the social fund, which extends £500m a year in interest-free loans to some 1.2 million benefit claimants.
The Tories said they were acting like "loan sharks" by suggesting credit unions take over the lending facility and charge up to 2% per month interest.
The government said it wanted to make the fund more widely available.
A Department for Work and Pensions spokeswoman said: "The social fund provides affordable credit for people who need it.
"We are now exploring how we can make it more widely available to people in work as well as on benefits.
"We want to make sure people in need do not turn to illegal loan sharks who can charge interest of 1,000%."
[This] would have people in dire financial circumstances facing an annual APR which is more than twice the current rate of a subprime mortgage
Jenny Willott
Liberal Democrats
No decisions had been made and the government would do nothing to create difficulties for low-income families, she added.
The social fund was set up to help needy people, many of them elderly or disabled, meet the costs of items such as cookers, cots and funerals.
Details of the proposed changes were released in a consultation document.
It sets out how the new interest rate would see the average budgeting loan, of £433.30, incurring interest totalling £47.80.
This would take an additional four weeks to pay off, at the average loan repayment rate of £10.54 a week.
'Simply outrageous'
Shadow work and pensions secretary Chris Grayling said: "These proposals are simply outrageous.
"Thousands of people are losing their jobs every week, and it is nothing short of extraordinary that the Government's answer is to propose abandoning interest-free emergency loans, and start charging 27% a year instead.
"Gordon Brown and James Purnell are behaving like loan sharks."
Liberal Democrat work and pensions spokeswoman Jenny Willott said the proposal was "totally unacceptable".
"What the Government is proposing would have people in dire financial circumstances facing an annual APR which is more than twice the current rate of a sub-prime mortgage.
"Providing advice and information about savings and money management is all well and good but when people are so desperate that they need a crisis loan, it's just not the right time."
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