Chancellor Rachel Reeves told Channel 4 yesterday that she “can’t leave welfare untouched”, as speculation mounts that additional costs will be added to the Motability scheme.

In the interview Reeves said  ‘You know we’ve now committed to doing reform in a different way, but we can’t leave welfare untouched.

‘We can’t get to the end of this Parliamentary session and I’ve basically done nothing.

‘Because if more and more of our money that we spend as a government is spent on welfare, you’ve got less for the NHS, you’ve got less on schools and you have to put more on people’s taxes.’

Reeves gave no details of what she intended.

But the press have been briefed that the chancellor is considering ending VAT and insurance tax premiums for Motability cars.  Whilst this would not reduce the benefits bill in any way, it would increase the amount of tax paid by claimants using the Motability scheme.  This could result in around £1 billion a year in extra revenue for the government.

The possibility of removing luxury car brands such as BMW and Mercedes from the scheme is also being considered, as the inclusion of these vehicles causes such outrage in some sections of the press.

More details about what the Chancellor has planned may not emerge until the budget on 26 November.

You can watch the Channel 4 interview here.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 59 minutes ago
    There is a robust response to this from “funding the future” from today. Exactly what we are all thinking and no doubt feeling.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 hours ago
    So Motability may lose its exemption from.
    20% VAT on vehicle lease payments.
    12% Insurance premium tax.
    And may pass on those costs to the Motability scheme users.
    Possibly raising the cheapest vehicles from all of users PIP enhanced rate mobility component, to an additional about £14 a week on top of that. If taken as a upfront payment like the current scheme appears to do that would make Motability unaffordable, as over a 3 year lease agreement that would be an upfront payment of £2,184.
    Is Motability supposed to find vehicles that cost thousands of pounds less to buy in the first place? So the scheme can offset the cost of the taxes and people can continue to pay the same as they do now.

    Will Motability also be losing its VAT exemption from vehicle purchases and resale. Further hitting the viability of the scheme. As it relies on being able to offset the lease costs by being able to resell the vehicles to recoup some of the cost of the original purchase of the vehicles.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 hours ago
    Maybe the best thing she could do as a compromise, is too freeze benefits for the remainder of the parliament.
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