fecking disgusting but sadly what you'd expect, worse still the average Brit will endorse such behaviour.
The way we treat the down on their luck and disabled is a national disgrace as far as im concerned.
The problem is making money somewhat difficult or complicated to claim is a legitimate tactic in some regards in weening out the people who are entitled to something but don't actually need it and would only claim it if it were very simple and easy.
Marriage allowance for example goes under-claimed to the tune of hundreds of millions every year which is a win-win for the government - they've gotten the political gain from giving the money away without a lot of the money ever having to be paid (or more accurately not taking less money from the person).
Naturally there's a balance to be had though. Everyone would agree that standing outside the job centre with a bundle of £50 notes in an envelope giving them out to anyone who said they were jobless or disabled would be ridiculous because people aren't honest enough to only take an envelope if they truly need and are entitled to it.
Likewise most people would also agree the old system of essentially declaring yourself disabled and being entitled to the benefits that go with this was also unsustainable (a cleaner at our company 15 years ago resigned due to his realisation that he could declare himself entitled to disability benefit due to a perfectly manageable case of psoriasis. In 2012 he reapplied for his old job after having this rightfully cut. His wife was in the same position due to her morbid obesity).
I suppose it's all about where you set the bar. You either make it too easy to claim which ensures everyone entitled to the benefit gets it, but at the same time many people who aren't slip through the net and cost the exchequer billions. Or you end up making it too difficult and although only those that deserve it will get it, some vulnerable people who are deserving end up sadly slipping through the net.
I do however believe that as a country we have this lazy belief that the government is the silver bullet that should cover all bases. They should be spending more of education, more on healthcare, more on social care, more on infrastructure, more helping poorer nations, more on social security, more on pensions, more on police, more on defence; whilst at the same time already running a huge deficit as it is (and with tax receipts as a % of gdp at record levels "higher tax" is a false economy)
If we as a society feel the disabled or down on their luck aren't getting the support they need, we should donate our time and/or money to helping support them. If families and communities took a bit more communal responsibility rather than finger pointing I think the country would be a much better place, regardless of government.