BENEFITS are not too high, they are too low.
I’ll say it again: out-of-work benefits, such as Jobseeker’s Allowance at £71 a week for over-21s, are far too low. This perpetuates Britain’s low-wage and low-growth economy, violates the contributory principle, and increases the overall benefits bill for those in work.
Ask yourself: could you live on £71 a week? Of course not.
As the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, pointed out last week, those who have made national-insurance contributions throughout their working lives are appalled to discover that, when they become unemployed, they are plunged into poverty. Unfortunately, he doesn’t appear to want to do much about it. The prospect of living on this miserly allowance is what keeps people sticking with low-paid jobs, or going part-time, or taking black-economy work and declaring themselves nominally self-employed.
The low rate of benefits paradoxically increases the welfare bill because the state has to pay benefits to nearly 10 million people who depend on benefits for more than half their income.
The big growth area in welfare is not the so-called “skivers” who exploit the system, but people in work who can’t afford to live.
The costly architecture of child benefits, tax credits, housing benefit, disability allowances and all the rest is based on this dysfunctional regime by which taxpayers’ money is used to subsidise low-paying employers.
This system can be, and is, exploited by some claimants who discover they can make a lot more by harvesting child benefits and housing benefits than by working. A family of six living in a council home can “earn” more through benefits than through working in minimum-wage jobs. Hardly surprising, then, that some take that course. The astonishing thing is that all the millions who are on low wages don’t all do the same. The truth is that most people on benefits dearly wish to work, indeed are working, even though they gain little, financially, by doing so.
Their goodwill has been exploited by successive governments which seem to believe that low pay is a good thing in itself. They take the banker’s view that the way to economic dynamism is through the exploitation of those at the bottom and the enrichment, through low taxes, of those at the top. But low pay does not lead to economic growth – quite the reverse. Low pay depresses growth by draining demand from the economy by reducing family spending power. Low pay also reduces industrial efficiency by discouraging employers from using the most advanced labour-saving technologies.
It doesn’t have to be this way.
In countries like Germany, the most successful manufacturing nation in the world, unemployment benefits are 60% of earnings up to a cap of well over £2000 a month; more if there are dependants involved. The Germans believe that, if people have paid into a system of unemployment insurance, their incomes should be protected if they fall out of work. These benefits decline sharply after two years but are always very much higher than they are in the UK.
In Nordic countries like Denmark, unemployment benefits are even more generous, to a degree unthinkable here. We, in Britain, assume that generous unemployment benefits discourage people from working and lead to an inflexible labour market. The reverse is true. Under Denmark’s system called “flexsecurity”, workers can be hired and fired much more easily than they can in Britain, which encourages entrepreneurialism. Nordic countries like Denmark are cited by the OECD and the World Bank as among the best countries in the world for starting a business. They have coped most successfully with the financial crisis and have better growth and productivity rates than Britain.
Even bankrupt Ireland has a more generous benefits regime than Britain. Basic Jobseeker’s Allowance there is nearly £200 a week, with over £100 for dependants. This hasn’t discouraged hundreds of the world’s greatest companies from investing in the Republic – Apple, Amazon, Cisco, Dell, PayPal, Oracle … Last year alone more than 13,000 new jobs were created by inward investment to Ireland. Indeed, labour flexibility based on sustainable benefits has helped Ireland to reconfigure its economy out of the banking crash.
Why do we not hear anything about this in Britain? Why do we cling to backward, punitive attitudes to unemployment? Labour productivity in Britain is among the worst in Europe and getting worse. People are inhibited from retraining in Britain because they cannot afford to risk a period of unemployment. Labour mobility is sluggish because people are stuck in their council ghettos on housing benefit and cannot afford to move to where the jobs are. People are scared to risk setting up businesses on their own.
We have prehistoric attitudes to work and business in Britain, which is why Britain’s manufacturing and exporting record is so poor. We have governments which believe that speculation and house price bubbles, combined with brain-dead austerity programmes, are the way to economic improvement. They have forgotten everything Adam Smith ever wrote about the productive economy.
They choose to stigmatise those who have lost jobs through no fault of their own.
Ed Miliband’s belated decision to join in this punitive welfare consensus last week will not help Labour to win any votes. Adopting the arbitrary measures like the social security cap, which will reduce benefits even further, and by means-testing benefits such as child benefit, he will drive Britain even further into economic primitivism. It was bad politics to withdraw the winter-fuel allowance, worth only £100 million, from pensioners who are the group in society most likely to vote at the next election.
But what is really objectionable is Ed Miliband’s failure to reinforce the principle of social insurance. A contributory insurance system should do exactly what it says: insure people against loss of earnings in unemployment. People in Britain who have contributed throughout their working lives have a right to see their living standards maintained, at least for a reasonable interval.
Britain’s miserly system is a breach of contract with workers who have invested in national insurance in good faith: it is the biggest mis-selling scandal yet. By undermining this principle further, Labour risks undermining the moral basis of the welfare state.
Benefits should not be used as a means of driving down wages.
They should not be used to divide society by creating perverse incentives for workless people to have large families in order to collect benefits.
In Scotland, we do not on the whole subscribe to punitive welfarism, and the social insurance principle here is still intact, in measures such as free elderly care and free education. Devices like the bedroom tax are not welcome here.
But for how much longer?
Now that a welfare Rubicon has been crossed by Ed Miliband, it can only be a matter of time before Scotland is forced down the same miserable and dishonest route to social and economic degeneracy. Welfare for bankers; workfare for the rest.
Joe Kane WRITES:
McWhirter’s completely wrong about people being better off living on benefits than working.
It’s nothing but IDS propaganda. Don’t fall for it.
Here is Mark Serwotka of the DWP workers’ union, the PCS, destroying IDS and his usual evil evidence-free neoliberal horseshit – The New Statesman 29 Apr 2013:
‘The “better off on benefits than in work” claim is a complete fallacy – where’s the evidence?’
‘Challenge to Iain Duncan Smith to prove anyone better off on benefits’
~ PCS 29 Apr 2013
I’d just like to say that since Mark Serwotka made this public challenge, I have never heard IDS repeat the claim that he is going to make work pay.
I’d also like to note that, as a good Fb chum of mine’s said, if you want refute any claims made by IDS just ask him for evidence or proof.
That’s all you need to do to beat him in any argument.
As we all know by now, he’s a serial liar, about everything.
As far as foodbanks are concerned, it looks like the Labour Party is very much in favour of them and see them as having a big future in Britain.
Here is the first half of a BBC Newsnight item featuring Labour policy chief supremo Jon Cruddas MP –
‘Jon Cruddas on Labour economics‘ Video Clip Part 1 of 2 (13 February, 2013)
Related: The hidden welfare state that the U.K. government (and Labour) dares not speak of Posted on May 15, 2013
10 Responses
just another little tory jeff3
People working for minimum wage are on some benefit or other so are themselves benefit claimants, the threshold of earnings laid down after which you can’t claim is very low.
A living wage would relieve them of claiming altogether, it’s a joke the government pay multinationals welfare money to subsidise their wage bill and no sanctions for them either!
Spot on Mick. In Scotland we have the chance to ditch Westminster Tory/Labour policies and start our own welfare system.
The Tory party conference in Stirling attended by Alisdair Darling was proof enough that Scotland needs a Yes vote more than ever.
Try living on £71 per week if your out of a job or the minimum wage if your in a job Kerry Ann, and you’ll soon find out how impossible it is.
How you manage to live is really down to how much you are paid.
It’s only irrelevant if your rich.
Politics is a well paid career, that’s why.
I notice Ed Miliband did not say anything about the spread of food banks when he talked about welfare. I’ve just found out there’s one near us.
Solidarity indeed. They pick us off one by one. Single mums, students, child benefit, sick and disabled, pensioners and while you say “phew! glad that’s not me!” They get away with it. Will they tinker with minimum wage next? Will it bother anybody if they freeze it or lower it? If they start with young people first? Will anyone care? The full role out of the welfare cuts won’t be finished until 2017 so I reckon there are a few more groups to trim yet. Who will we be looking down on next?
While food banks dole out food, to people sent to them by the DWP, the DWP can mess people about as much as they like. If DWP mess up payments then they should have to arrange interim payments not agree they need help and send them to the nearest food bank. Shame on DWP for using the good will of generous folks in this way. (is anyone counting how many people they are sending?) The benefits are too low even if they are paid on time. People have bills they have to pay, the only economy left for them to make is food. An unexpected bill for an emergency is a huge problem. People are struggling, look at the proliferation of firms like Wonga taking advantage of it too. If wages and benefits were adequate these firms would have little business. If folks will pay 2000% and more to borrow money surely something is wrong.
[…] Ed’s welfare squeeze betrays workers: BENEFITS are not too high, they are too low | Black Triangle… […]
“It stated that government policies forced some of the most deprived members of society to “shoulder the heaviest burden of national debt created by the super-rich”.”
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-24321105
“MMR jab or else: Cruddas alarms Labour with benefit claimant policy threat”
http://www.politics.co.uk/news/2013/09/23/mmr-jab-or-else-cruddas-alarms-labour-with-benefit-claimant