Neil_F
Coach
Here's something to cheer you up on a Friday.
Our benefit system largely uses a principle known as "right to reside" to determine eligibility to certain benefits. UK citizens have an automatic right to reside, but for foreign nationals it is harder to meet the eligibility criteria.
The European Commission have determined that this discriminates against citizens of other EU Member States and has given the British government two months to stop applying the "right to reside" test. If it doesn't then the case will go to the EU Court of Justice.
By stopping the "right to reside" test, the EU regulations governing cross border social security (Regulation 883/2004) will take predence. This regulation uses the concept of "habitual residence" to determine eligibility. Habitual residence is the State of the individual's centre of vital interests and almost always determined by the location of an individual's family and dependents.
What this means is that any EU citizen will be able to turn up in the UK with their family and be entitled to claim benefits. They will have the same entitlement as a UK citizen who has lived and worked in the UK for 40 years.
http://europa.eu/rapid/pressRelease...format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en
The Department of Work and Pensions estimate this will cost the taxpayer £2bn per year in cash alone.
Our benefit system largely uses a principle known as "right to reside" to determine eligibility to certain benefits. UK citizens have an automatic right to reside, but for foreign nationals it is harder to meet the eligibility criteria.
The European Commission have determined that this discriminates against citizens of other EU Member States and has given the British government two months to stop applying the "right to reside" test. If it doesn't then the case will go to the EU Court of Justice.
By stopping the "right to reside" test, the EU regulations governing cross border social security (Regulation 883/2004) will take predence. This regulation uses the concept of "habitual residence" to determine eligibility. Habitual residence is the State of the individual's centre of vital interests and almost always determined by the location of an individual's family and dependents.
What this means is that any EU citizen will be able to turn up in the UK with their family and be entitled to claim benefits. They will have the same entitlement as a UK citizen who has lived and worked in the UK for 40 years.
http://europa.eu/rapid/pressRelease...format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en
The Department of Work and Pensions estimate this will cost the taxpayer £2bn per year in cash alone.