I know I keep saying it, but means testing drags everyone down rather than giving a leg up. If you have saved, you usually get nothing until it has been used up, and even then, there are limits on what you can do with your own money in case you are accused of deprivation of assets.
Spend as you go, however, and you get the best of both worlds, yet it is those who, like me, speak out against the inequity of the system who are accused of selfishness and worse, not the people doing the spending. I am not, incidentally, speaking from the perspective of someone wanting to gain - I am 63, so years off pension age, and am unlikely to need social care anytime soon. I could easily spend my savings, such as they are, before I qualify for benefits, and I am very aware of the financial advantages of doing so. I won't, as I have always contributed, and believe in 'from each according to ability and to each according to need'; but I think that the system is, as it stands, horribly unfair.
It sounds as though this is adding in another postcode lottery, too, on top of the means test unfairness. Areas where councils are strapped will not be able to offer grants, whereas ones in which house prices are higher will - so yet again, people who have 'made' money from rising prices are advantaged over those who haven't, regardless of who has paid tax and NI in their working years.
I genuinely don't understand how people can think that this is a fair way of doing things, yet they get angry when anyone suggests that those who 'can afford to pay' (as they see it) should get back as much as those who have spent their income instead of saving it.
It wouldn't be something for nothing if it were tied to taxation - charged at source, so that those who earn more pay more, and equalised so that single-earner households don't pay one lot of tax and get two lots of benefits, unless there is a reason why that hasn't been possible. That would be a way of ensuring that more money came into the system, and could pay for a better life for all who have contributed.