Skip to content or view screen version

British welfare reform mirrors America's!

ncap.org | 22.05.2002 09:33

.

British Welfare Reform
Daily Policy Digest

Welfare Issues

Tuesday, May 21, 2002

Welfare reform in Britain has been termed "A New Deal for Young People," with four policies grabbing headlines. The first two, "welfare to work" and "making work pay," sound familiar to American ears. The second pair, "tackling social exclusion" and "ending child poverty," is less so.


"Making work pay" was characterized by the introduction of a minimum wage set at a level informed by the U.S. experience, and the adoption of wage subsidies delivered through the tax system that were available to all low-income families with a member working for more than 16 hours each week.
One of the purposes behind promoting the obligation to work is to compensate for the disincentives created by means-tested assistance systems. British authorities have shown particular interest in American programs that raise employment among residents in the lowest-income public housing.
Labor's commitment to tackle social exclusion reflects the European approach of identifying a number of facets to the problem -- lack of opportunities to work and to acquire education and skills, childhood abuse, disrupted families, barriers to older people living fulfilling and healthy lives, inequalities in health, poor housing, poor neighborhoods and crime -- addressing specific forms of social exclusion, then engaging the local populace to address the problem.
Many of the principal concerns of the 1996 reforms - promoting work and marriage, reducing births outside marriage - led to systematic support for people from 18 to 25 years old that promises opportunity and income to those who are willing to work, but that is not linked to parenthood.
New Labor's vision has been defined by an extremely effective mantra: "work for those who can, security for those who cannot."

Source: Robert Walker and Michael Wiseman, "The House that Jack Built: The Story of British Welfare Reform," The Milken Institute Review, Fourth Quarter, 2001.

For text
 http://www.milkeninstitute.org/poe.cfm?point=review

For more on welfare
 http://www.ncpa.org/iss/wel/

ncap.org
- Homepage: http://www.ncpa.org/iss/wel/2002/pd052102e.html

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

turning britain into a third world country

22.05.2002 09:59

yes Blair and new labour/old tories, are turning Britain into a dog eat dog THIRD WORLD STATE, with their reform of the welfare state. The welfare state was set up after the 2nd world war, after working class British soldiers in europe came into contact with russian forces and left wing european influences after fighting against the extreme right wing capitalist vichy hun scum neo nazis in europe. As reward for the sacrifices that working class British soldiers gave in terms of their lives, the welfare state was set up to provide for the families of dead soldiers,and those who lost their jobs after war factory closures and technological advance which replaced manual labour. The welfare state in Britain is now being dismantled, as new labour/old tories, seek to use up more and more of taxpayers money, to pay for the futile war in afghanistan against the all elusive alkakeeda network and unclesama bin liner. Whilst funding to the NHS, schools and the poor is cut, simultaneously taxes are still rising to pay for stockpiling weapons and military wages, and funding multibilliion pound jubilee extranvaganzas to pay homage to a sponging rich oul bat,HRH. As new labour/old tories support for gobilisation and military intervention in third world countries continues, ignoring the job losses and unemployment that occurs as a result of rich multinationals relocating their factories in the west to the third world, and a mass increase in immigration as result of interventionist foreign policies, as those who are displaced and made destitute as a result of the military intervention in far off soils, flee their destroyed war torn third world countries in a mass exodus to western countries and Britain becos these refugees have mistaken Britains military interventionist foreign policies and are misled into thinking that britain actually likes them.

avril


welfare and activism

22.05.2002 10:23

check out:

 http://www.eco-action.org/dod/no9/dole.htm
(Do or Die Number 9. In the paper edition, pages 103-109)
An article entitled: "Running to Stand Still", for an idea of how welfare to work policies have effected 'the movement'- The gist is that welfare to work has stopped large scale direct action, as people have to work etc- and can’t get paid for being active. It also points out that people have done their own blags- such as working for a friend who’s less demanding, or getting training in web design etc- skills useful on protests. But this has led to less solidarity among activists

tom