Page 51 - Reforming Benefits Decision-Making -(updated - August 2021)
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sector equality duty, the DWP must understand the impact their policies and
               practices have on people with protected characteristics. This is very difficult
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               to do without collecting data.  The lack of systematic data collection also
               means that they cannot properly evaluate if changes they have already made
               to the sanctions process, or those that  we suggest below, are effective. We
               therefore join  the  National Audit Office (NAO),   SSAC   and Work  and
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               Pensions  Select  Committee   in  calling  for  the  DWP  to  improve  data
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               collection and evaluation. Specifically, it should collect data on:
               a)  Protected characteristics of all claimants, in particular UC claimants,
                   and claimants who are sanctioned.   Data on disability  should be
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                   disaggregated by impairment type. The DWP should explore ways to
                   collect this  data,  including by  learning from practice across other
                   Government departments and through communicating the value and
                   purpose of such data to claimants.
               b)  Setting of claimant commitments and the use of easements.
               c)  What happens following application of a sanction e.g., do people
                   move off benefits entirely, are they sanctioned again, do they move
                   into work?



          128  Equality Act 2010, s.149 requires public authorities in the exercise of their public functions, to have
          due regard to the  need to (i) eliminate discrimination, harassment and victimisation and any  other
          conduct that is prohibited by or under the Act; (ii) advance equality of opportunity between people who
          share a relevant protected characteristic and people who do not share it; and (iii) foster good relations
          between people who share a relevant protected characteristic and those who do not share it. Equality
          and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), Equality Information and the Equality Duty: A Guide for
          Public Authorities (2014).
          129   National Audit Office,  Supporting disabled  people to work  (HC 1991, 2019)  para  25; National
          Audit Office, Universal Credit: getting to first payment (HC 376, 2020) para 26.
          130  SSAC, The effectiveness of the claimant commitment in Universal Credit (see n. 12 above) p. 34
          (Recommendation 4).
          131  Work and Pensions Committee, Benefits Sanctions (see n. 11 above) para 52.
          132  The DWP does collect some data on protected characteristics of certain claimants. For ESA there
          are data available on claimants’ age, gender, ethnicity and medical condition, there are also data on the
          age, gender, ethnicity and whether someone has a disability of ESA, JSA and IS claimants who are
          sanctioned (as well as the medical condition of ESA claimants who are sanctioned). However, there is
          very little information available on the protected characteristics UC claimants–  only  their  age and
          gender – for both those on UC and those who are sanction. See Stat-Xplore


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