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Deborah Orr: Radical welfare reform? I don't think so

Wednesday, 23 July 2008

Radical? We have forgotten the meaning of the word. The idea that the Government's proposed changes to the benefits system are "radical" is a joke. Radical changes are fundamental changes. All that is offered in the Green Paper of the Work and Pensions Secretary, James Purnell, is some more largely ineffectual stick, which will need more largely ineffectual bureaucratic monitoring in its wielding.

These incremental changes in emphasis will not change things because positive intervention in people's lives, via the benefit system, comes far too late for many of the people whose difficulties are most endemic, and does not offer holistic help to the communities most likely to harbour these problems.

Few people dissent from the idea that there are some people for whom state support is essential. It is heartbreaking that these people have to be so sparingly and so grudgingly protected by the state in order not to encourage the others. Each and every person who abuses the benefits system, by claiming when they shouldn't have to, abuses and demeans the people who are in real need, with every penny that they milk.

Benefit abuse, whether enacted with deliberate cynicism or because of misplaced, delusional, self-pity, is utterly horrible and cruel. Or course it is right to try to put pressure on to people to stop behaving in this way. Of course it will improve their lives if they manage to claim only responsibility for their own lives. But 10 years of stubborn adherence to benefit dependency, in a time of burgeoning job opportunities, ought to be enough to teach us that this rethink – backed by the Conservatives – is nothing like radical enough.

Only the terminally messed up believe that it is better to be on benefits than in work. The trouble is that the terminally messed up are already terminally messed up by the time they enter the ambit of this system. It is like waiting for a person's legs to fall off before wielding the stick, not as a support, but as a weapon. It is elaborate and expensive and even if it gets off the ground is likely to prove pointless.

A long-forgotten report from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, back in 2000, offered a portrait of youth growing up in the highly disadvantaged neighbourhood of Willowdene in Teesside north-east England. It found that most of the young people shared common aspirations, and saw "getting a proper job" as key to attaining adult status. Very few were keen to live a life on benefits, although only a few actually proved able to secure long-term or rewarding work.

Those among the young people who were involved in "criminal careers"– and criminals love benefits – tended to share typical markers. They had almost always disengaged from school at 12 or 13. They had indulged with their peers in street drinking, drug use and petty crime from early on, then had progressed to more serious crime and drug use. Most residents pinpointed the influx of heroin into the neighbourhood in the early 1990s as having a devastating impact on the local community.

Yet despite the wider stigma they faced – many felt they did not even get job interviews because their postal address showed them as coming from a notorious area – most had no desire to leave the neighbourhood. Their families and social networks were there, and they could not imagine surviving without that support.

The essential thing to remember when discussing benefit reform is that benefit dependency does not happen in a vacuum. It happens, usually, in places where there is high unemployment. Shared experience in such places is often negative. It is easy to persuade yourself that it is ok to take drugs when you have children, or to live on benefits and do bits of work you pick up, when plenty of others around you are doing it too. It's easy to be depressed when you live in a place that isn't convivial or safe.

When the Government talks of how the unemployed should be forced to do community work in return for benefits, I'm afraid it makes me laugh, even though I don't disagree with the principle. Why? Because one of the things that is missing from the sort of communities that are most defaced by graffiti or by litter – the two most cited forms of community work – are people who are actually employed at a very local level to keep them clean and ordered, and respected for doing so.

Such an infrastructure might provide this community work, and people might take part in it quite gladly. But it just isn't there, for the most part. Local councils are often as distant and bureaucratic as Whitehall. If they were not, there would be fewer social problems in the first place.

Imagine what it might be like actually to have the name and the telephone number of a team of named people responsible for maintaining just a few local streets or parks and amenities? Imagine what it might be like if such people were well paid, were provided with a vehicle and perhaps a home, had decent budgets, and understood that it was part of their job to liaise with the community, with the police, with the drug action team, with the schools, and so on?

The stark fact of benefit dependency is that it has gone on now, in some areas, for several generations. Politicians are fond of discussing ways of "empowering communities". But they shrink from being really radical and providing local public sector work to ordinary local people, instead of desk-bound civil servants carrying out policies that are doomed to fail.

So much policy keeps right on careening down the wrong route, gobbling money that really does have to be invested at the sharp end. It makes me quite ill, for example, when I imagine the wonks in Whitehall who are presently planning a bright new future without any indolent youth by raising the age at which children must receive compulsory education to 18.

The children who are really at risk of becoming professional system-milkers, on drugs, working in the black economy, causing local havoc, need to be helped while they are still at primary school. It is often easy to spot children who are likely to go off the rails very early on in their education. But the things that will help them – boarding schools, special schools geared to their needs – are invariably dismissed as too expensive or out of step with the idiocy of under-resourced, lip-service "inclusion".

Even the welfare reforms that have been proposed – which can only work if they are implemented as part of a wider change in direction that combines community intervention and targeted educational intervention – are being talked down as costing too much. The last 10 years are littered with good ideas that were "too expensive". Money has been squandered instead on cheaper "solutions" that just don't work. There are no cheap solutions. But there are real ones.

d.orr@independent.co.uk

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Comments

44 Comments

I can assure you that IB claimants in England have exactly the same medicals.
I have no idea if the form is the same but, here in England, the form is confusing, misleading and designed to trip claimants up, the same question, for instance, asked multiple ways which confuse a lot of people and lead to unnecessary appeals, which cost more money.
An example of this being a close friend who if quoted by the DWP as suffering from "fits and convulsions" yet not "falls" as the wording of the form is so ambiguous. In fact she suffers from unstable diabetes and I personally should like the DWP to clarify how on earth a person can have a fit without falling!

Posted by jillian | 23.07.08, 22:59 GMT

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In Scotland IB claimants are assessed by a Benefits Agency doctor. These examinations are rigorous and independent. Any government hoping to succeed in the community service for benefits drive would be well advised to tighten up loopholes allowing non-EU residents to claim free medical treatment by becoming students at bogus colleges or simply arriving here poor and ill. Many tax payers/voters are going to be less than delighted to see a 50 year old parent cleaning dog mess or graffiti while immigrants claim unverifiable refugee status. And what of positive discrimination for ethnic minorities? Let's be honest about British society; those with children can work a 20 hour week and draw the benefit of Family Tax Credit. This is because there are few real full-time jobs. Libraries, for example, are usually run by one or two full-time workers and a handful of poverty-stricken perpetual part-timers. I see an increased underclass, more violence and racism. Michael Moore we need you now.

Posted by Arabella | 23.07.08, 22:32 GMT

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These new measures will neither minimise nor prevent the abuse of state support. If anything, all it will do is transfer the burden from the state to the banks and the suffering financial services sector- in this country it is far too easy to fraudulently obtain credit and loans without being pushed for repayment (self-evident by the U.K's £1 Trillion of consumer debt).

As Deborah Orr rightly notes, you have to proactively challenge that underpins benefit fraud in the first place (not helped by the altruistic materialism rife in Britain), and the perpertrators will just seek another avenue- if I can remember correctly, there was a documentary over two years ago where a J.S.A claimant discovered she was entitled to borrow up to £25,000 in credit from her bank!

Posted by Darren | 23.07.08, 20:25 GMT

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If the government was serious about taking the burden off the taxpayer, then wealthy non-domiciled residents would be instructed to pay some form of income tax, there would be cessation of rewarding business owners for failure with dubious bonuses, and tax-evasion would be punished with more severity. But as this is Nulabour then you should expect a flock of flying pigs first...

And public money should not be profligated on various management consultancies and advisors in the public sector- I witnessed £28 million of taxpayers money spent on a wholly unnecessary piece of new I.T software in the public sector. Guess what? It promptly failed.

Now that's a REAL scandal taxpayers should question...

Posted by Darren P. | 23.07.08, 20:09 GMT

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The main problem with the reforms is they are likely to be applied in a way that only serves to discriminate against those truly incapable of employment or who are still unable to find it due to discrimination.

The sad reality of Britain in the 21st century is that entrenched attitudes about disability will not disappear overnight and the social inclusion of those able to gain paid work should not and must not be at the cost of the social exclusion of those that still can’t.

It will take years and maybe even decades to get those that can work into work. It is therefore imperative that welfare reforms recognise this so disabled people, in or out of work, are at least provided with the minimum funds required to allow a decent degree of social inclusion.

I believe the minimum level of support needed to achieve this would be at least equal to that provided under Pension Credit arrangements not least as in many ways our physical and financial situations tend to be very similar.

Posted by Peter Farrington aka "Sociable" | 23.07.08, 20:08 GMT

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Who was the worse example possible of drink, fags, vice and living off the taxpayer? -the delightful late Princess Margret!

Posted by reeza | 23.07.08, 19:27 GMT

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This is the first intelligent article I have read on this subject in the last few days. As someone who has a serious and unpredictable physical, systemic ,neurological condition that prevents me from continuing with my scientific career (or any job). It has made a refreshing change not to be blamed for all the problems in ths country. I did not ask for what happened to me, it was the luck of the draw.I take all the slings and arrows thrown my way by the powers that be in forceful and positive manner. Even if they can be totally obnoxious and obdurate. Anyone who thinks that the disabled or chronically ill are the root of the problem, they are wrong, we're just the latest scapegoats for this government. If you think that you would never be in this position, think again. It's easier than you think.

Posted by Sarah | 23.07.08, 18:26 GMT

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All of this is, of course, terribly true. The greatest curse of an increasing (and increasingly demonised) underclass isn't drink or drugs but politicians knee-jerking at the whine of focus-groups. Thatcher's 'no such thing as society' comment had terrifying prescience - the footfall goes from the SUV to the shopping mall and school gate via the office car park, with as little human interaction as possible. People demonstrate a preference for nucleated tribes in many ways, with little encouragement to chose alternatives. The heroism of single parents and others trapped between agencies unable to address even the proximate causes of their difficulty, let alone wider ones, is remarkable. To use them as convenient scapegoats for our consistent failure and inattention doesn't even offer Cameron's 'broken society' a sticking plaster for its continuously suppurating wounds.

Posted by Bill Dunlop | 23.07.08, 18:18 GMT

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Andrea - no they wouldn't starve. But the profit they have made from their house would be taxed fairly. Or there should be a buyback scheme. Whay should your parents get benefits and make profit out of property? Should benefits not go to the hard-up and not property-owners? Of course, the greed of people and their children makes this idea unpopular and it will not happen in our bribery democracy system - but we will all suffer due to millions swho do not own property getting very angry indeed and turning to crime. Would it not be fair for your parents to use some of their property value to live on? WE have all paid a lot of tax and NI - but, as I said, you cannot expect all this back or aim to profit from it. Also, there are many who earn a lot and own property AND get universal benefits like child benefit and maternity pay. THAT is wrong.

Posted by RadicalBoy | 23.07.08, 16:51 GMT

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RadicalBoy, my parents own a property, it is the house they bought in 1962 £200, it's a small back to back terrace. But despite owning a house they are still very poor pensioners who get benefits, Carers Allowance, Heating allowance, as well as a State Pension, which they worked for from the age of fourteen to their mid sixties. Under your scheme, of not paying people who own a property any benefits at all, my parents, and many, many like them, would starve.

Posted by Andrea | 23.07.08, 16:26 GMT

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