The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.
All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
All Official Reports of public meetings of committees.
Displaying 1877 contributions
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 8 January 2026
Claire Baker
You mentioned new lets—is that data different?
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 8 January 2026
Claire Baker
You also break down the figures by local authority. I am surprised that Glasgow’s percentage is quite small, while the percentage in places such as East Ayrshire is quite high. Can you talk me through that? I do not know whether this is correct, but under
“% of recipients where LHA (UC) does not cover rent”
you say that the figure in Glasgow is 24 per cent.
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 8 January 2026
Claire Baker
The paper says that the estimated cost of unfreezing was £2.4 billion or £2.5 billion, or something like that.
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 8 January 2026
Claire Baker
Yes. The big chunk of the money for these policies goes on that, with the percentage almost doubling in the past 10 years.
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 8 January 2026
Claire Baker
The witnesses here this morning have called for an increase in LHA from the 30th percentile. Could that have unintended consequences through behavioural changes? If the percentile was increased, would landlords just increase the rent? We have rent control coming in in Scotland, but not until 2028. There are some concerns that, while we wait for the rent control to be introduced to deal with the issue, landlords might push up rents. Could there be behavioural changes that would have unintended consequences and therefore increase the pressure on the sector?
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 18 December 2025
Claire Baker
You have said that the scrapping of the two-child cap will make a difference. I am trying to understand the figures from the Scottish strategy. I do not know whether you have the Scottish Parliament Information centre’s papers, which say that the
“latest modelling, (including mitigating the two-child limit), estimates 100,000 fewer children in relative poverty”
by 2030. Has modelling been done on what would happen if the two-child cap were to remain in place? I am assuming that the 10 per cent reduction is due to the scrapping of the two-child cap.
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 18 December 2025
Claire Baker
Good morning, cabinet secretary. It is unfortunate that the UK Government is not at the meeting because the letter, which I understand was received late last night, reflects a different picture of the engagement between the two Governments, but we do not have the opportunity to question the UK Government about that. The letter speaks about a monitoring and evaluation framework. The cabinet secretary said that there was no statutory target for the UK plan. There is a statutory target in Scotland, but my understanding is that we are not on track to meet it. The monitoring and evaluation framework is in place and is being developed. The letter says that
“we will continue to work closely with the Scottish government to complement ... monitoring and evaluation activity”.
Is it the case that we have a statutory target in Scotland, but that we are not as far along to achieving it as we would hope to be?
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 18 December 2025
Claire Baker
That would be helpful. I am trying to understand the impact of the Scottish Government’s policies. If the two-child cap were to remain in place, how many children would the strategy help? If we accept that the scrapping of the two-child cap reduces the number by 95,000 in Scotland, that leaves us with 5,000 children being helped. If we could get clarity in writing on that, that would be helpful.
I was going to ask about the impact of the increase in universal credit on Scotland’s targets, but you might need to come back and reassure me about that.
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 11 December 2025
Claire Baker
That is welcome.
The contract starts on 31 January, so there is quite a lot to do before that date, given that you are implementing TUPE, mapping and all the rest of it.
Social Justice and Social Security Committee
Meeting date: 11 December 2025
Claire Baker
It is good that you have the intention to keep the staffing complement that was there before.
Carol Mochan asked about the value of the contract being lower. Usually, the cost of a contract is in people. Employment is the heaviest cost. You suggested that the use of technology at other ends of the business would explain how you can do it on a reduced budget, so it is not to do with staff reduction.