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Tougher benefit rules to hit European immigrants

Plans unveiled by Iain Duncan Smith require migrants to earn £150 a week to qualify for welfare help

European immigrants will face a tougher test to access a range of benefits from March 1, Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith has announced.

Mr Duncan Smith set out plans requiring European Economic Area (EEA) migrants to demonstrate they have earned around £150 a week for three months in order to qualify for “worker” status, which opens the door to more generous benefit entitlements.

He said: “These reforms will ensure we have a fair system — one which provides support for genuine workers and jobseekers, but does not allow people to come to our country and take advantage of our benefits system.”

People who have been classed as workers are able to claim child benefit and child tax credit, jobseeker’s allowance if they lose their job, and housing benefit.

The earnings threshold will be set at the level at which people start paying national insurance, £149 a week in 2013/14, and £153 a week in 2014/15.

Anyone with earnings below that threshold will face a fuller assessment of whether their work was “genuine and effective,” with the possibility of being denied worker status.

When a decision is made that an EEA migrant should not be considered a worker, their access to the welfare system will be restricted.

Jobseekers will need to wait three months before getting income-based jobseeker’s allowance and, after the introduction of new rules on April 1, they will be ineligible for housing benefit.

Those deemed not economically active would need earnings above income support levels and comprehensive sickness insurance to be eligible to claim child benefit or child tax credit.

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