Apparently the amount deducted from the weekly job seekers allowance is calculated at £1 per week for every £250 of savings > £6000 and < £16000.
Annualised that means £52 return from £250!! If anyone knows a way of getting 20% return on their savings could they please share it? At a time of 0.5% Base Rate this seems to be very unlikely.
The answer to your question is nobody.
But then you are drawing an inappropriate analogy that assumes that the deduction (which does not apply to Contribution-based JSA, only the Means-tested type) is intended to cover the equivalent earnings from the interest on the savings; it isn't.
The idea is that one uses up the capital from one's savings first, before drawing money from the State, funded by taxpayers.
As someone who has used up most of the savings that were supposed to keep me going in later life, I found that buildersmate's answer rather judgemental.
I found airbolt's last post rather judgemental. Perhaps they should relaise the public purse that was supposed to keep retired taxpayers going later has also been mostly used up at least in part by paying unemployment benefits.
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