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Government Still Reforming ‘Utterly Broken’ Welfare System – Murray

SCOTLAND, UNITED KINGDOM, JUL 3 – Government dropped proposed Personal Independence Payment changes but will cut Universal Credit payments for new claimants, affecting 371,000 people annually, with reforms starting April 2026.

  • Scotland's welfare bill is projected to rise from £6.8 billion in 2025/26 to £9.4 billion in 2030/31, marking a 50 percent increase in three years.
  • Scottish Secretary Ian Murray stated that the UK Government is working on reforming the 'utterly broken' welfare system after recent parliamentary concessions.
  • Murray noted that there is consensus that the welfare system needs reform and described it as 'completely and utterly broken and unsustainable.'
  • A review of the Personal Independence Payment is expected, following a last-minute climbdown in Parliament, which may impact the Government's finances.
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Government still reforming ‘utterly broken’ welfare system – Murray

The Scottish Secretary said the Government is still on a ‘journey’ of welfare reform.

·London, United Kingdom
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INTELLINEWS broke the news in on Thursday, July 3, 2025.
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