DWP benefit payments get 6.2% boost and MPs pocket £3,300 pay hike as taxpayers 'shoulder economic burden'

Both benefit claimants and MPs are due to benefit from a payment boost thanks to 'exhausted' taxpayers
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Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) benefit claimants and MPs are both set to receive substantial payment increases this week as measures to offset the ongoing cost of living pressures.
Politicians will pocket an additional £3,300 annually through a five per cent salary adjustment, pushing their earnings to £98,599.
Those claiming benefits will see an even larger percentage uplift, with payments rising by 6.2 per cent , which is a figure that doubles the current inflation rate.
The increases arrive despite Chancellor Rachel Reeves declining last week to introduce broad support measures for households grappling with energy costs stemming from the conflict in Iran.

Benefit claimants and MPs are getting a wage boost as taxpayers 'shoulder economic burden'
|GETTY
Cabinet ministers and backbench MPs alike will receive the pay boost, meaning senior Government figures, including Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Chancellor Rachel Reeves stand to benefit from the uplift.
The TaxPayers' Alliance has cautioned that the nation risks fracturing into a "two-tier society" where ordinary workers face mounting pressure to sustain others' living standards.
William Yarwood, media campaign manager for the think tank, said: "Taxpayers are exhausted from having to repeatedly broaden their shoulders as ministers demand ever more from fewer and fewer people.
"Britain is rapidly becoming a two-tier society, with politicians and benefit claimants protected from economic struggles while a shrinking class of working productive taxpayers shoulder an increasing burden."
Benefit fraud - from your wallet: Total amount lost to benefit fraud per year | GB NEWSLATEST DEVELOPMENTS
Billions of pounds in benefits are estimated to be overpaid due to fraud or error each year | GB NEWS/DWPMr Yarwood argued that welfare payments ought to be frozen rather than raised, given current economic conditions, and suggested parliamentary salaries should be tied to gross domestic product (GDP) per capita so that politicians' fortunes mirror those of the wider population.
The parliamentary pay increase significantly outstrips the three per cent inflation rate and exceeds the 3.3 per cent wage rise offered to nursing staff. Peers in the House of Lords will also gain from the adjustment, with their tax-free daily attendance allowance climbing to £390.
Earlier this month, the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority approved the salary rise to £98,599, citing growing "complexity" in the role and increased levels of "intimidation" faced by elected representatives.
The watchdog has indicated that political salaries will continue their upward trajectory, projecting earnings of £110,000 by 2029.

MPs are in line for a pay boost
| HOUSE OF COMMONSRecent official statistics have highlighted a widening gap in remuneration, showing public sector wages grew by 5.9 per cent in the three months to January, compared with just 3.3 per cent for private sector workers.
Universal Credit, the UK's primary benefit payment, will see its main rate climb by 6.2 per cent, benefiting some 6.5 million claimants at a cost of £1.9billion funded through reductions to the support's health component.
The following week, Labour will scrap the two-child benefit cap at an annual expense of £3.5billion, a move that could deliver more than £10,000 yearly in additional payments to the largest affected households.
Restore Britain MP Rupert Lowe, who gives his salary to local charities, claimed his Great Yarmouth constituents would be "the only taxpayers in the country who will benefit from this MP pay hike".







