oggbashan
Dying Truth seeker
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2002
- Posts
- 56,017
Despite the UK's welfare state we too have an underclass of people in "poverty".
The definition of "poverty" varies according to the commentator. Some suggest that poverty starts with anyone earning less than the average income - that means that half the bell curve will always be in poverty no matter what anyone does.
We do not have real poverty in that people have nowhere to live and nothing to eat except perhaps for some illegal immigrants, or immigrants waiting for a decision on whether they can stay or not.
We do have an underclass of people who have no incentive to move off state dependency. For most it is not a matter of choice but because of the disincentives to earn slightly more than state provided benefits. Earning just a few pounds a week more than the minimum stops many other benefits on a pound for pound basis and sometimes leaves the person/family actually worse off than if they didn't work.
For example I know a couple of pensioners that have a minimal income from a deceased spouse's company pension. If they didn't have that income they would actually be better off because the pension stops their entitlement to other benefits.
The arguments about deserving and undeserving poor go back to Elizabeth/Shakespearean times when the Poor Laws were introduced. Reading some of the pleas for admission of children to the Foundling Hospital in the 19th century is salutary. The hospital's income was insufficient to support all the children who could need help and the commissioners had to decide between children they could and couldn't take. They chose children of mothers who had tried and failed over children whose mothers hadn't tried. The desperate pleas are heart-rending yet only about one in ten appeals could be met.
I know a very few people locally who could be classed as the underclass of "undeserving" who are working the system. I know of even fewer who have been convicted of defrauding the system and some who should be. I know many who try to get out of the system and become self-supporting but are failing because of the poverty trap that stops benefits once another income is obtained.
Most of the people I know who live on state benefits would prefer to earn their way but the system does not make it easy to move from dependency to self-sufficiency.
Those who have a history of mental illness or have physical or mental disabilities have the hardest struggle to earn their way off benefits without intervention from someone else. There are charities that will help but as in the 19th century they have more potential beneficiaries than they can support.
Our system isn't perfect. It is better than nothing but the cheats and non-triers are vastly outnumbered by those who would prefer not to be state-dependent.
Og
The definition of "poverty" varies according to the commentator. Some suggest that poverty starts with anyone earning less than the average income - that means that half the bell curve will always be in poverty no matter what anyone does.
We do not have real poverty in that people have nowhere to live and nothing to eat except perhaps for some illegal immigrants, or immigrants waiting for a decision on whether they can stay or not.
We do have an underclass of people who have no incentive to move off state dependency. For most it is not a matter of choice but because of the disincentives to earn slightly more than state provided benefits. Earning just a few pounds a week more than the minimum stops many other benefits on a pound for pound basis and sometimes leaves the person/family actually worse off than if they didn't work.
For example I know a couple of pensioners that have a minimal income from a deceased spouse's company pension. If they didn't have that income they would actually be better off because the pension stops their entitlement to other benefits.
The arguments about deserving and undeserving poor go back to Elizabeth/Shakespearean times when the Poor Laws were introduced. Reading some of the pleas for admission of children to the Foundling Hospital in the 19th century is salutary. The hospital's income was insufficient to support all the children who could need help and the commissioners had to decide between children they could and couldn't take. They chose children of mothers who had tried and failed over children whose mothers hadn't tried. The desperate pleas are heart-rending yet only about one in ten appeals could be met.
I know a very few people locally who could be classed as the underclass of "undeserving" who are working the system. I know of even fewer who have been convicted of defrauding the system and some who should be. I know many who try to get out of the system and become self-supporting but are failing because of the poverty trap that stops benefits once another income is obtained.
Most of the people I know who live on state benefits would prefer to earn their way but the system does not make it easy to move from dependency to self-sufficiency.
Those who have a history of mental illness or have physical or mental disabilities have the hardest struggle to earn their way off benefits without intervention from someone else. There are charities that will help but as in the 19th century they have more potential beneficiaries than they can support.
Our system isn't perfect. It is better than nothing but the cheats and non-triers are vastly outnumbered by those who would prefer not to be state-dependent.
Og