Source: https://www.gov.scot/publications/council-tax-reduction-scotland-july-september-2019/
Timestamp: 2020-07-07 13:45:22
Document Index: 766163944

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 1', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 2', 'art 2', 'art 1']

Council tax reduction in Scotland: July to September 2019 - gov.scot
Council tax reduction in Scotland: July to September 2019
9781839603617
Council Tax Reduction in Scotland: Recipients and Income Forgone Tables (April 13 to September 19) (XLSX 102.1 kB )
Council Tax Reduction in Scotland, July to September 2019
This quarterly publication provides statistics on the Council Tax Reduction (CTR) scheme, which reduces the Council Tax (CT) liability of lower income households in Scotland. A CTR ‘recipient’ can be a single person or a couple, with or without children, since CT is charged on a per-dwelling basis, rather than to individuals.
The statistics are based on data extracts from local authorities, and cover the time period July to September 2019.
There were 471,790 CTR recipients in Scotland in September 2019, a marginal decrease of 0.4% over the quarter.
The total weekly income forgone by local authorities on CTR in September 2019 was £6.570 million.
There were 80,590 fewer CTR recipients in Scotland in September 2019 than at the beginning of the scheme in April 2013. This is a decline of 14.6 per cent, though the fall in recipients has been gradual. However CT and CTR reforms alongside increases in CT annually since April 2017 has resulted in increases in the total weekly CTR awarded (as shown in Chart 1 below).
Chart 1: CTR Recipients and Weekly Income Forgone in Scotland, April 2013 to September 2019
1. CTR Recipients
Chart 1 (page 1) shows the CTR caseload in Scotland decreasing marginally between July and September 2019 in line with most years, with a slight rise in August 2019. Over the 3 month period, the CTR caseload in Scotland decreased by 0.4 per cent to 471,790 in September 2019. This is after the roll out of Universal Credit (UC) to several large local authorities including Glasgow City, City of Edinburgh and Aberdeen City from September 2018 which is likely to have caused the fluctuations seen in the number of CTR cases towards the end of 2018. As the Department for Work and Pensions begins to move people from their current benefits to UC, this may result in future fluctuations in the number of CTR recipients.
The number of CTR recipients for each local authority between July to September 2019 is shown in Table 1 below. Most local authorities recorded a decrease in CTR recipients (26 out of 32 local authorities), with the largest percentage decrease seen in the Argyll and Bute (-1.6 per cent) over this period.
Table 1: CTR Recipients by Local Authority, July to September 20191,2
(Jul-Sept 19)
473,510 474,510 471,790 -0.4%
13,460 13,560 13,410 -0.4%
11,710 11,760 11,700 -0.1%
8,660 8,640 8,570 -1.0%
6,690 6,630 6,580 -1.6%
32,990 33,230 32,970 0.0%
5,050 5,050 5,020 -0.5%
13,230 13,190 13,210 -0.1%
17,930 17,940 17,830 -0.5%
13,060 13,140 13,050 -0.1%
5,480 5,470 5,460 -0.4%
6,770 6,790 6,780 0.1%
4,280 4,270 4,240 -0.9%
12,810 12,840 12,770 -0.3%
30,740 30,720 30,330 -1.3%
88,060 88,370 87,930 -0.1%
16,710 16,690 16,590 -0.7%
9,670 9,760 9,750 0.8%
6,230 6,230 6,210 -0.2%
5,560 5,600 5,550 -0.2%
2,130 2,130 2,120 -0.6%
16,570 16,720 16,660 0.5%
35,980 35,970 36,010 0.1%
1,200 1,210 1,210 1.3%
8,370 8,360 8,300 -0.8%
18,110 18,220 18,010 -0.5%
8,420 8,460 8,290 -1.5%
1,090 1,080 1,090 0.0%
10,680 10,690 10,600 -0.7%
30,170 30,130 29,970 -0.6%
5,460 5,460 5,440 -0.3%
11,590 11,540 11,500 -0.8%
14,680 14,680 14,630 -0.3%
Chart 2 below shows the CTR recipients by local authority as a proportion of the Scottish CTR population for September 2019 in descending order. It can be seen that Glasgow City accounted for the highest proportion, almost one fifth of all recipients in Scotland compared to the Shetland Islands (accounting for 0.2 per cent). The five local authorities with the highest numbers of CTR recipients accounted for almost half (46 per cent) of the total number of CTR recipients in Scotland in September 2019. This can be attributed to the size of the local authorities where those with larger populations may be expected to have a higher number of CTR claimants and therefore recipients. These five local authorities are:
Glasgow City accounting for 19 per cent (87,930 recipients);
North Lanarkshire accounting for 8 per cent (36,010 recipients);
City of Edinburgh accounting for 7 per cent (32,970 recipients);
Fife accounting for 6 per cent (30,330 recipients); and
South Lanarkshire accounting for 6 per cent (29,970 recipients).
Chart 2: CTR Recipients by Local Authority as a proportion of the Scottish CTR Population, September 2019
2. Weekly Income Forgone
The total weekly income forgone for Scotland was £6.570 million in September 2019, a marginal decrease of 0.3 per cent over the quarter. Income forgone estimates follow the same general pattern as the number of recipients, with the exception of April 2017, April 2018 and April 2019 where there was a large increase in the income forgone over the previous month whilst the number of CTR recipients decreased. The reasons for this are due to the changes to CT and CTR introduced in April 2017 alongside increases in CT annually since April 2017 (as shown in Chart 1, page 1). A breakdown of the total weekly income forgone by each local authority in July, August and September 2019 is shown in Table 2 below.
During the quarter, the weekly income forgone increased slightly by 0.2 per cent between July and August 2019 as a result of the marginal increases in CTR recipients reported in section 1. This is similar to the upward trends seen during the month of August from previous years.
It can be seen that Glasgow City accounted for one fifth (20 per cent) of the total weekly income forgone for Scotland followed by City of Edinburgh (7 per cent) and North Lanarkshire (7 per cent) in September 2019 which is consistent with the higher numbers of CTR recipients recorded for these local authorities.
Table 2: Weekly Income Forgone (£’000s) by Local Authority, July to September 20191,2,3
6,592.3 6,606.6 6,570.5 -0.3%
193.4 194.6 192.9 -0.3%
160.7 161.3 160.4 -0.2%
106.2 106.2 105.0 -1.1%
104.1 103.5 102.5 -1.5%
487.1 489.8 486.0 -0.2%
67.5 67.6 67.2 -0.4%
173.7 173.3 173.6 0.0%
237.8 237.8 236.9 -0.4%
176.2 177.4 176.5 0.2%
90.1 89.7 89.6 -0.6%
98.6 99.0 99.1 0.5%
69.9 69.7 69.6 -0.3%
156.3 156.7 156.1 -0.1%
401.5 401.3 396.9 -1.1%
1,342.9 1,347.8 1,339.9 -0.2%
236.2 235.6 234.0 -0.9%
129.5 130.6 129.9 0.3%
95.8 95.6 95.4 -0.4%
74.3 74.5 73.6 -0.9%
26.1 26.0 26.2 0.1%
227.3 229.2 228.0 0.3%
446.4 446.5 447.0 0.1%
15.2 15.4 15.6 2.7%
121.8 121.9 121.1 -0.6%
253.3 254.5 251.5 -0.7%
106.2 107.0 105.3 -0.9%
13.5 13.5 13.5 0.2%
160.1 160.3 159.2 -0.5%
382.9 383.1 381.1 -0.5%
80.1 80.1 80.1 0.0%
165.8 165.1 164.6 -0.7%
192.0 192.2 191.9 -0.1%
2 Weekly income forgone estimates are based on ‘number of recipients multiplied by average weekly reduction’ for each local authority and benefit type for the given month.
3 Figures are rounded to the nearest £100. Components may not sum to total due to rounding. Percentage change are based on unrounded figures.