Universal Credit
early progress : Department for Work and Pensions : report
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Contributions
- Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons - Contributor
Publication
2013 - Stationery Office, London, England
Language
English
Word Count
13,500 words, Guess
Page Count
54 pages
Identifiers
- Internet Archiveuniversalcredit0000unse
- ISBN-100102986142
- ISBN-139780102986143
- OCLC Control Number859384963
- Better World Books9780102986143
and 1 more
- Open LibraryOL31915999M
Description
This report concludes that the Department for Work and Pensions has not achieved value for money in its early implementation of Universal Credit. The Department was overly ambitious in both the timetable and scope of the programme, took risks to try to meet the short timescale and used a new project management approach which it had never before used on a programme of this size and complexity. It was unable to explain how it originally decided on its ambitious plans or evaluated their feasibility. Nor did it have any adequate measures of progress. Over 70 per cent of the £425 million spent to date has been on IT systems, and £34 million of its new IT systems has been written off. The existing systems offer limited functionality - the current IT system lacks a component to identify potentially fraudulent claims so that the Department has to rely on multiple manual checks on claims and payments. Problems with the IT system have delayed national roll-out of the programme, which will reduce the expected benefits of reform and - if the 2017 completion date remains - increase risks by requiring the rapid migration of a large volume of claimants. The source of many problems has been the absence of a detailed view of how Universal Credit is meant to work. In addition, poor control and decision-making undermined confidence in the programme and contributed to a lack of progress. The Department has particularly lacked IT expertise and experienced frequent changes in senior management.
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