In the DWP accounts the National Audit Office states that
Universal Credit has "not achieved value for money", noting that the
DWP has written off £40.1m of assets developed for the programme "as it
will never use them" and that "it also now expects to write down
£91.0 million of the remaining assets to nil value by March 2018, due to the
considerable reduction in their expected useful life." The head of the NAO
comments: "While this is the appropriate accounting treatment, it should
not detract from the underlying issue that the Department has spent £91.0
million on assets that will only support a limited service for 5 years, with
clear consequences for public value." In addition, it notes that there
were "considerable weaknesses" in the department’s financial controls
over Universal Credit and that the "size and complexity" of the
programme "stretched the Department’s capacity and capability". Read
more on the New Statesman website.
The Guardian view on unhealthy Britain: from housing to junk food, there
are solutions | Editorial
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People are living with sickness or disability younger than a decade ago.
That should shock the country and prompt action
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