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<p>No year contains 53 weeks. This perceived issue arises where a landlord charges
rent weekly on a Monday and, because of the way the calendar falls every 5 or 6 years,
seeks 53 rent payments in a year, with the 53rd payment in part covering the tenancy
for the first few days of the following year.</p><p>Universal Credit is paid on a
monthly cycle. Where a tenant has a weekly rental liability, they will have to make
either 4 or 5 rent payments in any one month. This means that claimants are ‘overpaid’
by UC in months where they have to make four rental payments and ‘underpaid’ where
they make five. But over time this broadly balances itself out. It is impossible to
accurately align weekly and monthly payment cycles at all points in time.</p><p> </p><p>Where
a tenant makes a 53rd weekly rent payment on the last Monday of the 2019/20 year,
only two days of that payment relates to a liability falling within that year (ie
payment covering Monday and Tuesday of that week as Wednesday falls in the new year).
Thus, five days of that payment is an advance payment for the following month and
that month has only four Mondays and hence four rent payments. The combination of
the advance rent payment and the ‘overpayment’ in April 2020 means that the shortfall
is immediately recovered.</p><p> </p><p>There is a separate issue with respect to
the way the calculation in the Universal Credit regulations converts a weekly liability
into a monthly allowance. The conversion is achieved by multiplying the weekly rent
by 52 and then dividing by 12. This effectively means one day’s rent a year (two days
in a leap years) are not covered by UC. We are currently considering whether this
formulation around weekly rents, and potentially other weekly amounts in the UC calculation,
should be amended.</p>
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