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<p>No-one will face a one-week shortfall in their Universal Credit (UC) housing element
in 2020 as no year contains 53 weeks. This perceived issue of there being a one-week
shortfall due to there being 53 weeks in a year arises where a landlord charges rent
weekly on a Monday and, because of the way the calendar falls every 5 or 6 years,
requiring 53 rent payments in a year, with the 53<sup>rd</sup> payment in part covering
the tenancy for the first few days of the following year.</p><p> </p><p>Where a tenant
makes a 53<sup>rd</sup> rent payment in a given year, this payment will cover some
days in the subsequent year. This will mean the following month only has four payment
dates and, as such, the claimant will be ‘overpaid’ for their housing and their shortfall
will be recovered.</p><p> </p><p>Universal Credit payments are designed to mirror
the world of work, with monthly payments reflecting the way many working people are
paid. This model of monthly payments allows claimants to take responsibility for budgeting
their own income and helps prepare them for getting back to work.</p><p> </p><p>We
are aware of 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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