Department for Work and Pensions

The Department for Work and Pensions is a department of the Government of the United Kingdom, created on June 8, 2001 from the merger of the Employment part of the Department for Education and Employment and the Department of Social Security. It is currently headed by the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, a Cabinet position.

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Purpose

The department's stated purpose is "To promote opportunity and independence for all through modern, customer-focused services.".

Ministerial team

Source: [1]

Services

The department also has responsibility for the Health and Safety Commission and the Health and Safety Executive.

Location and Staffing

The department's central administrative office is in Whitehall, London. There are a number of other regional offices, Jobcentres, Pension centres and others where members of the public can visit to find out information.

The department's annual "expenditure limit" (budget) figures are, at the time of the 2004 Spending Review: 2004-05: £8,164m, 05-06: £8,432m, 06-07: £8,212 and 07:08: £8,105.

The DWP employed (in 2003) 131,000 members of staff to discharge all of its functions. This figure will reduce by 30,000 by 2008, with a further 10,000 being moved to front-line services. This is part of the Government's pledge to reduce civil servant numbers by 100,000.

External link

See also: Department for Work and Pensions, 2001, Anne McGuire, Cabinet of the United Kingdom, Child Support Agency, Civil service, David Blunkett, Debt, Department, Department for Education and Employment