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Tory benefit reforms 'will make work pay'
Sector:Central Government
Date Created:Fri 30th Jul 2010, 15:25:15
Source:24 Dash
Link:http://www.24dash.com
The Government unveiled radical proposals to reform the UK's "antiquated" benefits system today, pledging the biggest overhaul in decades in a drive to simplify the structure and make work pay.
Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith gave a critical account of the complex welfare system, which he said had helped create ghettos of worklessness, often affecting generations of families.
The current arrangements amount to a "supertax" on some of the worst off in society, said the minister, adding that he feels a maths degree is needed to work out how to claim benefits.
He set out a series of options aimed at ensuring that people would see the value of moving from benefit to work through simplifying the existing tax and benefits system.
Mr Duncan Smith said he wants to unify the disparate elements that form the benefits structure as well as rectifying the "illogical" position of benefits paying more than work.
Options included combining elements of the current income-related benefits and tax credit systems, bringing out-of-work and in-work support together in a single system, and supplementing monthly household earnings through credit payments reflecting circumstances such as children, housing and disability.
Mr Duncan Smith told a conference in east London that five million people are on out-of-work benefits, with a "staggering" 1.4 million on benefits for nine or more of the last 10 years, while the UK has one of the highest rates of workless households.
One in six children will grow up in a workless household, said the minister, adding that up to three generations of the same family are now growing up with no work in their lives.
"The benefits system has created pockets of worklessness, where idleness has become institutionalised. The welfare budget is spiralling out of control, up from £63 billion in 1996-97 to £87 billion in 2009-10, although the actual increase was £61 billion in the last 10 years.
"The key must be to break the cycle of dependency. We must make sure that work pays, even for the poorest."
Mr Duncan Smith said the benefits regime often provides little incentive to work, meaning that some people would be taxed on the first eight or nine hours of the first 10 hours they work, describing it as a "supertax."
There are 14 manuals dealing with benefit claims, and one adviser recently spent 45 minutes on a computer with a lone parent before discovering she would be better off working, he said.
The system cost £3.5 billion to administer, while a further £5 billion was lost in fraud or errors, which are "staggering" amounts.
"We need nothing less than a complete rethink of the benefits system. A new regime to replace the current complicated system. We have a rare opportunity to reinvent our antiquated welfare system to reflect the nature of what people need."
Shadow work and pensions secretary Yvette Cooper described Mr Duncan Smith's announcement as "a sham to cover the fact that the Budget actually cut work incentives, cut jobs and cut help for people to return to work".
She added: "Labour's minimum wage and tax credits made many families thousands of pounds better off in work. We think it's good to go further, but the truth is that the Budget is heading in the opposite direction, cutting tax credits and increasing withdrawal rates.
"Major reform either costs billions or means taking money from those who need it most. Iain Duncan Smith needs to be honest and tell us which it is."
The Unite union said it had serious concerns about how the plans would work given the "enormous" job losses which will flow from this autumn's Comprehensive Spending Review.
Assistant general secretary Gail Cartmail said: "Iain Duncan Smith is arguing that his reforms will encourage people back to work, yet at the same time the Government is scrapping the Future Jobs Fund which would have provided 80,000 jobs for young people.
"Costing for the reforms is not being announced today. For the Government to afford to do this will inevitably mean that other benefits not directly related to the unemployed will have to be cut, given the hardline message coming from George Osborne at the Treasury.
"Most economic forecasts are indicating that UK growth in the next two years is likely, at best, to remain low and that means the likelihood of new jobs being created without the impetus of state spending is negligible.
"Add to that the encouragement for people to work longer and you have a cocktail of measures which do not mix well and leave a sour taste in the mouths of the most vulnerable."
Sally Copley, Save the Children UK's head of policy, said: "Around 1.5 million children live in workless households and fall below the poverty line and any change that might improve this situation is a good thing.
"We strongly support the proposals to reform the welfare system and make work pay. The current system is too complex and produces too many disincentives to work.
"But the Government must be prepared to invest in these changes and they must not lead to cuts in benefits for our most vulnerable families. Without adequate investment, the proposals simply will not work and could damage families further.
"While we welcome the proposals, it's important to remember that they cannot be a cure-all for child poverty. Work is not a route out of poverty for all families.
"For some families work is not an option, for example families with very young children, or families affected by disability. For others, the barriers to taking up employment are not high marginal tax rates, but a lack of suitable jobs or a lack of childcare. Spending cuts could make this worse."
Kate Stanley, deputy director at the ippr thinktank, said: "Everyone agrees that the benefits system is far too complicated, difficult for people to navigate and in need of serious reform. If enacted, the Government's plans could really help people understand where they stand when thinking about going back to work.
"But even these radical proposals will not solve the unemployment challenge by themselves - because they only look at one part of the problem. Most crucially they don't address the issue of whether there are enough jobs for the people who need them.
"With 2.5 million people unemployed and five jobseekers for every vacancy, it is difficult to see how today's welfare reform plans will tackle the real causes of worklessness. So as well as questions about the affordability of the Government's proposals, there are also real questions about their effectiveness."
John Cridland, the CBI's deputy director general, said: "Long-term worklessness has been a problem for many years, and the Government's announcement on realigning the benefits system to make work pay and improve welfare to work services is a step in the right direction.
"People who work tend to have longer, healthier lives, and working brings wider social benefits. Getting more people off benefits and back into work is also crucial to restoring the public finances, as those in jobs will pay taxes and draw less in welfare payments.
"The private and voluntary sectors have a strong track record in helping the long-term unemployed back into work, and the Government is right to draw on their expertise to help deliver this important programme."
Public and Commercial Services union general secretary Mark Serwotka, said: "Iain Duncan Smith seems to think he can magic away the benefits bill by encouraging more people into work. But, at a time when the coalition Government is planning to cut departmental budgets by half in some cases, the question is, where are the jobs going to come from?
"The Government's own research shows that for every job cut in the public sector, another job will be lost in the private sector, and the cuts could add another one million people to dole queues.
"Rather than driving through its programme of destruction - including damaging cuts to Mr Duncan Smith's own department - the Government should accept the alternative: that the economy can only grow by creating jobs and investing in our future.
"There is no such thing as a benefits trap, only a low-pay trap. If Mr Duncan Smith was genuinely interested in getting more people off benefits and into work, he would propose increasing the minimum wage which, currently, is insufficient to lift working people out of poverty."
Corin Taylor, senior policy adviser at the Institute of Directors, said: "The current welfare system is letting down both claimants and employers, and the radical reform proposals set out in this report are very welcome.
"There is a wealth of potential in the UK's population that is currently locked out of the labour market by inflexible tax credit rules and penal marginal tax and benefit withdrawal rates.
"Businesses would benefit greatly from being able to access a larger workforce that is no longer penalised for working less than 16 hours a week. The most effective way to help people out of poverty is to help them get back into work, and these proposals will make a real difference."
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