idb wrote on Jan 17
th, 2008 at 11:50pm:
Caroline Flint: The Department estimates the average cost of making benefit claim by telephone using a BT landline telephone is in the following table:
0845 number. Monday to Friday 6am to 6pm. Based on an average call of 20 minutes at 3.95p per minute including a 6p set up fee per call.
0845 number. Monday to Friday before 6am and after 6pm and on Saturday. Based on an average call of 20 minutes at a BT rate of 1p per minute including a 6p set up fee per call.
Oh dear. Start again.
If I read the BT tariff sheet correctly the rates of 3.95p and 1p only apply to those on the Light User Scheme, BT Basic or BT Standard Rate, who incur a set up fee of 3p. Most BT landline customers will be on BT Together.
The only actual figures given are incorrect, and surely these are atypical claimants.
In a recent debate (see
posting covering this), it was mentioned that around 50% of telephone claims are made using a mobile phone. This renders all of the zero figures meaningless.
The question asked for the “average cost of making a benefit claim", not possible minimum costs giving incorrect figures for a rarely used telephone tariff for only one benefit based on an average call duration. It was the average cost that was requested. That would never be zero.
idb wrote on Jan 17
th, 2008 at 11:50pm:
… “The Pension Service will always offer to call state pension customers back if they express any concerns about the costs being incurred”.
One may first wish to consider the likelihood of callers being aware of the cost they are incurring so that they could become concerned. One may then wonder if someone who is politely asking about which of a complex array of benefits they may be entitled to receive would wish to start the conversation with a complaint. Some may do this as they angrily demand their rights, but they are no more entitled to fair treatment than those who may adopt a supplicatory tone.
From a political perspective, one may question why we are paying benefits to those who are so wealthy that they may be unconcerned about how they spend money. Those who have no concern about the cost of the call should surely be denied the benefit! Must that concern be expressed?
The answer given suggests that the 50% who call from mobiles do not receive this offer if they have called one of the numbers associated with Attendance allowance, Carers allowance, Disability living allowance, Incapacity benefit, Income support, Jobseeker's allowance, Pension credit or Social fund crisis loans.
In the recent debate (see link to posting above) Ms Flint indicated that the offer to call back applied to all DWP claimamts, not just those claiming the state pension.
Let us hope the hold message says something like “we are sorry for the high cost you may be incurring whilst listening to this message, but as soon as you get through we will be happy to call you back if you are concerned about this”.
There is very good and widely-used technology that will automatically record a request for a call back and schedule it. For those who are prepared to call back to those who are happy to give their number and wait for a call, this technology saves the wasted time, annoyance and totally unnecessary cost incurred by waiting on a dead telephone line.
(Members who are particularly engaged with this issue may wish to provide a suitable briefing for Ms Flint, her DWP officials who wrote this reply, Ms Osborne and others, including those who participated in the earlier debate.)