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Social Welfare Benefits

Dáil Éireann Debate, Wednesday - 23 March 2022

Wednesday, 23 March 2022

Questions (114)

Peadar Tóibín

Question:

114. Deputy Peadar Tóibín asked the Minister for Social Protection the amount spent on child benefit since 2017 by year ; the number of recipients of child benefit since 2017 by year; and the effect means testing child benefit would have on the amount allocated to child benefit and the number in receipt of child benefit in tabular form. [15141/22]

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Written answers

The table below shows Child Benefit expenditure and average recipient numbers for the years 2017 - 2021.

Year

Expenditure €000

Average Recipient Numbers

2017

2,086,390

623,170

2018

2,096,671

626,240

2019

2,102,436

629,760

2020

2,102,328

635,110

2021

2,090,455

632,820

Child Benefit is a universal scheme which is paid in recognition of the fact that all parents with children incur expenses with children.

It is designed as a universal payment, in recognition of the costs involved in raising children, and plays an important role in tackling child poverty. As a universal payment it does not rely on a means test or social insurance contributions.

Any decision to introduce a means test for child benefit would be a matter for consideration by Government in the context of both overall budgetary and child income support policy. The impact of means testing on child benefit expenditure would depend on the specific design of any such means testing regime.

I hope this clarifies the matter for the Deputy.

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