On the sick in the sunshine: 10,000 Britons abroad claiming £1million a week in benefits

  • 4,000 can continue to claim until retirement
  • European law forces UK taxpayers to continue to fund handouts

By
Daniel Martin

Last updated at 10:48 PM on 9th January 2012

At least 10,000 British emigrants are enjoying life in the sun on sickness benefits of up to £94 a week.

This could be costing the taxpayer almost £1million a week in a time of austerity.

Claimants in the UK are being forced to take new tests to see if they really are as sick as they say.

A (taxpayer funded) place in the sun: At least 10,000 Britons living overseas are enjoying handouts thanks to incapacity benefits. (Picture posed by models)

A (taxpayer funded) place in the sun: At least 10,000 Britons living overseas are enjoying handouts thanks to incapacity benefits. (Picture posed by models)

But officials admit that 4,000 older recipients of the benefit living in Spain, Jamaica and elsewhere will be able to continue drawing the handout until they reach retirement age.

This is because Iain Duncan Smith’s Department of Work and Pensions will not re-test the entitlement of those over 60.

The Government is forced by EU rules to pay certain benefits even if the recipients eventually move abroad.

In addition, Britain has reciprocal arrangements with other countries, including the U.S. and Jamaica, to keep up expatriates’ handouts.

It emerged last month that expat
pensioners receive £13.4million a year in winter fuel payments – even
though many live in sunnier climes where they seldom need to turn on the
heating.

Exemptions: Iain Duncan Smith has decided not to re-test the entitlement of those over 60

Exemptions: Iain Duncan Smith has decided not to re-test the entitlement of those over 60

But the cost of incapacity payments going abroad dwarfs that of winter fuel payments – costing up to £49million last year.

And even though some of the remaining 5,800 expat claimants will be reassessed, ministers will have to rely on foreign GPs to carry out the assessments, raising questions over whether they will be as thorough as the independent doctors hired by the DWP to carry out the assessments in Britain.

The highest rate of incapacity benefit is £94.25, meaning that up to £940,000 is going abroad every week to claimants.

If the allowance was initially claimed in Britain, anyone is entitled to continue claiming after moving to any of 30 European countries or their overseas territories.

Under European law, benefits acquired in one member state must be paid to those who move to another. The deal also includes Norway, Liechtenstein, Iceland and Switzerland – none of which is in the EU. The UK also has reciprocal arrangements with some non-European countries.

Tory backbencher Priti Patel said: ‘These figures are deeply alarming. Huge sums of public money are going to people unjustifiably, and it is all down to EU regulations.

‘British doctors will be strict in reassessing claimants, but we need an assurance that doctors in other countries will be just as strict.’

Emma Boon, of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: ‘It is ridiculous that EU rules prevent our government from making our own choices about whether to give benefits to those who have moved away.’

Assessments: IB claimants in the UK face stringent new tests to see whether they are eligible to continue claiming. (Picture posed by models)

Assessments: IB claimants in the UK face stringent new tests to see whether they are eligible to continue claiming. (Picture posed by models)

Priti Patel

Philip Davies MP

‘Deeply alarming’: Tory backbench MPs Priti Patel and Philip Davies both say the issue of expatriates claiming incapacity benefits must be tackled

A spokesman for the DWP said those who are genuinely too disabled or ill to work are entitled to the new Employment Support Allowance under EU rules.

If someone from the UK now living abroad has paid enough in National Insurance contributions, he or she can receive contribution-based ESA subject to the same checks as someone living in the UK.

He said: ‘Incapacity Benefit is an outdated benefit which is now closed to new claimants. We are currently reassessing everyone of working age on IB, whether they live in Great Britain or abroad.

‘People from the UK living abroad will only be entitled to ESA if they have paid sufficient National Insurance contributions. If they are found to be fit for work they will have their benefits stopped.’

He said those emigrants on Incapacity Benefit will be reassessed for ESA using exactly the same criteria as those in Britain. The DWP estimates that there are around 10,000 on IB abroad, the majority in Europe with many in Spain and Ireland.

About 5,800 living overseas are expected to be reassessed for ESA between February 2011 and April 2014. As in the UK, those who are approaching 60 or more will not be reassessed because they are deemed to be too old to seek work.

UK-based sickness benefit recipients will be assessed by DWP-approved doctors. But the DWP will have to rely on foreign GPs to carry out assessments for those based abroad.

Tory MP Philip Davies said: ‘I applaud the Government for getting to grips with Incapacity Benefit. But we mustn’t allow people to escape having to be reassessed by moving abroad.’

Here’s what other readers have said. Why not add your thoughts,
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The comments below have not been moderated.

Is this article saying that expats living in Jamaica would still get the winter fuel allowance?

‘Thorough as the independent doctors hired by the DWP’? Don’t you mean doctors, working for ATOS, who usually conclude that claimants, with terminal cancer, are fit enough to work?

So the Tories are happy to hand money to their core-voters – ie the over 60s, while grasping it back from younger people in the same situation, albeit not those wealthy enough to have moved overseas. Another example of this government taking money from the young to give it to the old. Students, go ahead, get yourselves in debt to the tune of 60 grand, after all, granny has to keep up her tan in Marbella!

This is small change compared to the amount we hand over to the EU every year, yet it is the EU that have caused most of these problems.
Let’s first get out of the EU then we can start to get rid of all benefit scroungers!

@ Jack Tar – If Britain is such a “God forsaken dump”, perhaps only those who continue to live here, pay taxes and actually contribute to British society should be in receipt of these benefits?
As opposed to those who abandoned this nation years ago to live the high life in the sunshine and bad mouth Britain at every opportunity, yet take every British handout going!

…and they’re popping home twice a year for prescriptions.

Jack Tar,Mijas Costa,Spain….’.Why does a recipient need to live in that God foresaken dump?’……………..I presume you moved out of Britain then and your area was rough. Well I don’t live in a dump or call my country a dump. So stay in Spain, you misrable old sod. No doubt when your ill you’ll want to come back for your free NHS treatment.

It maybe within the law. It makes it no less outrageous!
If they are on IB. Then how did they travel there in the first place. Or can they claim after they have left?
The whole sorry saga makes no sense! Iread stories like this every day and yet still go to work for very little reward. Apart from sense of purpose that is! To all you workers like me who drag your sorry little bums out of bed in the morning. Good luck lets hope they put a stop to this and all the dodgy benefit claims!

what about the money i.e £500 million pounds our goverment keeps giving in handouts on a regular bases to countries that can afford nuclear weapons but not afford to look after its own people.
we are being conned.

I’ve been sponging off the state for years …£94 ..or £194 its all free…so what ?it’s only mugs that work and pay tax

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