Figures released by the DWP show that calls about universal credit (UC) were answered 24 times faster than calls about PIP in March of this year, even though there were twice as many UC calls.
Labour MP Beth Winter aske DWP employment minister Guy Opperman what the average waiting time was for the UC helpline.
Opperman’s response showed that the “average speed of answer” for the UC helpline was 1 minute and 28 seconds in March of this year and three minutes and 39 seconds in April.
Winter also asked Tom Pursglove, DWP minister for disabled people, how many callers to various DWP helplines had been for various lengths of time from 60 minutes up to over two hours.
Pursglove said they were unable to answer the question about the length of calls, but did give the number of callers.
In March 2023 there were 1,345,024 calls to the UC helpline compared to 684,306 calls to the PIP helpline. In other words, there were almost twice as many calls about UC than there were about PIP.
In April there were 1,213,815 calls to the UC helpline compared to 530,117 calls to the PIP helpline, around two and a quarter times as many.
Yet in March the average speed of answer for the UC helpline was just 1 minute and 28 seconds.
For PIP it was 37 minutes.
So, UC calls were answered 24 times faster than PIP ones in March, even though there were twice as many.
And the reality may be much worse, as the DWP may have deliberately cut off many calls to the PIP helpline before they could be answered.
In April UC calls were still answered 11 times faster than PIP ones, even though there were two and a quarter times as many.
So, clearly the problem with the PIP helpline isn’t an overwhelming volume of calls.
It’s much more about where the DWP chooses to invest its resources.
And, at the moment, disabled claimants are at the very back of the queue.