I thought I'd do some research/calculations to see what life on JSA would be like:
I used the DirectGov Benefits advisor site to work out an estimate of what my girlfriend and I would get if we were both unemployed (but able to work), without children and living in a 1-bedroom flat:
- Housing Benefit – £72.46 per week
- Council Tax Benefit – £11.08 per week
- Jobseeker's Allowance (Contribution based) – £71.00 per week
- Jobseeker's Allowance (Contribution based) for your partner – £71.00 per week
Total: £225.54 per week
That's an annual 'net salary' of £10,825 for two people or the equivalent of one of us working 37.5 hours a week for minimum wage.
The cheapest 1-bed flat I could find from a quick search was £275 a month (so £15 a month left over from the above benefits).
The cheapest council tax band for Portsmouth is 18.85 a week (so assuming our 1-bed flat falls into this band we would have to find £7.77 a month from the above)
After housing, between us, we'd have £150 a month to pay for food and utilities.
Now I think we're pretty frugal with our groceries (we only really buy value branded stuff) and we end up paying about £30 a week.
That leaves £30 a month left for the utilities, not to mention all of the other costs of living. Even if we reduced our weekly shop it wouldn't make a huge difference.
I know you could get additional benefits for children (but then you have to support them) and we could try getting disability allowance or similar, but it doesn't sound like the life of Riley that it's made out to be.
When you consider the above in relation to the cap, 3% in line with inflation would give us an extra £324.75 which sounds like a lot — in fact it's more than someone on the average salary of £26,500 with a 1% rise.
However, to someone on the breadline trying to keep up with inflation that £325 is massive. To someone on an average wage it's not insignificant, but it wouldn't really affect your day-to-day life.