GT49er
Well-known member
OK, serious question, I'll come up with my personal serious answer (I realise others may disagree, but that won't change my answer!) Personally, I think it's too high - this country (or the government anyway) isn't awash with money.So - thoughts on the £35k threshold?
When the payments were first introduced they were paid to everyone of age. Means testing is an expensive business - administration, adjudication, appeals, tribunals, etc, and you could make a case - and somebody probably did - that it didn't cost much more if you just cut out the bureaucracy and paid it universally.
Still cost a lot the country can't afford though. We do, however, already have an up and running means test in this country; been around for years - social security, income support and now pension credit, and as always, that has been the threshold for other benefits. Get pension credit? Then you get a free TV licence if you're over 75, free NHS dentistry, etc. If you don't qualify for pension credit, you don't. That's it, black and white.
So, cutting back WFA to those who meet the threshold for Pension Credit and all those sorts of other benefits seems like a perfectly logical and sensible step to me. And yes, it did mean I personally stopped getting my WFA!
So, FWIW, I think the Government should have ridden out the storm and held firm. As I said, others may disagree - but that's not my problem!