Section: Welfare Benefits

Reflections - More Welfare Cuts Will Not Reduce People's Dependency on the State

Helen Barnard is Programme Manager at the Joseph Rowntree Foundation. The following Reflectiuons are from her recent blog.

Posted 11.10.12

Cutting benefits for groups who receive little public sympathy may make for a good Conference speech, but it risks increasing poverty and hardship.

Unless there is a follow up 'master plan' for creating more and better jobs, massively increasing access to them and sorting out the housing crisis it's not likely to do as much - as those advocating further cuts are hoping - to reduce the deficit or people's dependency on the state.

There were no big surprises in the welfare cuts proposals made by George Osborne and Iain Duncan Smith at the Conservative Party's annual conference. The core intentions seem pretty clear:

The recent British Social Attitudes survey showed that these kinds of cuts may well be in line with public opinion as views have hardened towards perceived 'benefits scrounger'.

However, the proposals are driven by more than this. They reflect a set of underlying beliefs about people's choices and motivations:

It's the evidence behind the first two that I want to question right now.

Both are true in some cases: some young people could stay living at home and some people who are out of work could get a job. However, the evidence suggests that they are not true for a great many people.

Earlier this year Kathleen Kelly blogged about the idea of removing Housing Benefit from the under-25s. She highlighted the housing crisis that is facing young people in 2020 and the youth homelessness that's driven by relationship breakdown.

Our research shows that the assumption that most young people receiving Housing Benefit could happily and safely live with Mum and Dad until they get a stable, decently paid job and move into a basic but adequate shared flat is a world away from the lives of many poor, young people.

Our evidence also shows that many people out of work do desperately want jobs but can't find them. This is reinforced by the statistics on underemployment - 6 million people want to work more but can't. ,p>It also demonstrates that just 'getting a job' isn't the whole point: millions are trapped in a cycle of poorly paid, insecure work and unemployment, with little prospect of breaking into better jobs. Getting a job is still the best route out of poverty. But these kinds of jobs aren't a very good route. When someone in a family in poverty gets a job, only 56% are lifted out of poverty.

We are hoping to address these issues with a new programme to develop a UK-wide anti-poverty strategy based on the best evidence across all the areas that contribute to poverty. Maybe it'll catch on.


Legal Update

KeyFacts

Housing Monthly Diary



Enter your email address to receive our e-newsletters advising on updates to KeyFacts

We will not share your email address with others or use it for any other purpose

Reporting on October 2012

Archive Issues Reporting Periods