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The paper delves into the persistent myth of the 'scrounger' in welfare debates, challenging the stereotypes of welfare recipients. It critiques the scapegoating of those reliant on welfare and presents evidence that contradicts the notion of intergenerational worklessness, attributing employment challenges to economic factors rather than a lack of a work ethic. It highlights the disproportionate distribution of welfare benefits, with a significant portion aiding pensioners and working individuals. Furthermore, it emphasizes the detrimental effects of stigma on vulnerable groups, particularly individuals with disabilities, and critiques the government's austerity measures as undermining both welfare and democratic principles.
2012
This report critically investigates the idea of 'intergenerational cultures of worklessness' and that there may be families where 'three generations have never worked'. CONTENTS Executive summary 1 Introduction: the aims and background of the research 2 'Three generations who have never worked'? 3 Cultures of worklessness? 4 Explaining long-term worklessness in families 5 Conclusion: (Intergenerational) cultures of worklessness? References Appendix 1: Research design and methods Appendix 2: The sample of families in Glasgow and Middlesbrough 1 INTRODUCTION: THE AIMS AND BACKGROUND OF THE RESEARCH The idea that worklessness can be explained, at least in part, by the inheritance through families of values and practices that discourage employment and encourage welfare dependency is a powerful one. Indeed, much recent and current UK policy thinking is shaped by a wish to challenge what is perceived as the intergenerational transmission of welfare dependency (DWP, 2010) and 'cultures of worklessness' (DWP, 2012). We have got places where there are three generations of men who have never worked. If your grandfather never worked and your father never worked, why would you think work is the normal thing to do?-Dame Carol Black, 2008 For too long, in too many deprived areas of the country, there has been a destructive culture that 'no-one around here works'.-Gordon Brown, 2003 … there are four generations of families where no-one has ever had a job.
National Institute Economic Review, 2012
2012
The views expressed in this report are the authors' and do not necessarily reflect those of the Department for Education.
2013
Economic dependency and worklessness are amongst the most destructive forces in our society. Signed On, Written Off revisits the challenges posed by our welfare system and other broader barriers to employment. Our central guiding question remains the same: what more can be done to help people find work, stay in work, and achieve economic independence? The report argues that while the recession has undoubtedly made things tough, the UK’s worklessness crisis is not primarily a product of the recession but actually preceded it. The number of people claiming out-of-work benefits has hovered above four million for more than 15 years – since well before the crunch. Even more alarming is that some neighbourhoods have more working-age people claiming benefits than in work. In one neighbourhood in Denbighshire it is close to 70 per cent. This report investigates economic dependency and worklessness in the UK today and outline the barriers which are preventing so many people from finding and staying in work. We explore a growing skills gap which is leaving many UK employers unable to fill their vacancies. We set out how some Jobcentres are failing to provide even the most basic support to those who need it most. We show how social housing can trap people in areas of the country where too few are in work. We also acknowledge how the changing nature of employment is making work less secure. All of this combined with the rising cost of living is making life extremely tough for many families.
Economic Disparities and the Middle Class in Affluent Countries, 2013
Sociological Research Online, 2014
This paper critically engages with a pervasive myth about welfare in the UK which is commonly spread by politicians, think tanks and the media. This is the myth that there are areas of the country which are so affected by entrenched cultures of ‘welfare dependency’ that the majority of residents are unemployed. In undertaking research that sought to investigate a different idea - that there are families where no-one has worked over several generations - we simultaneously gathered evidence about the likelihood that there are localities where virtually no-one is in employment. The rationale for Channel 4's Benefits Street was exactly this; that whole streets and neighbourhoods are of out of work and living on welfare benefits. We draw on research evidence gathered in Middlesbrough and Glasgow to investigate this idea. Thus, the aim of our paper is simple and empirical: is the central idea of ‘Benefits Street’ true? Are there streets and neighbourhoods in the UK where virtually no-...
Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, 2008
It is a rare occasion to find a book that has a much more ambitious goal than the one its author claims. But in Blame Welfare, Ignore Poverty and Inequality, 1 Joel Handler and Yeheskel Hasenfeld repeatedly claim that the thesis of the book is that America's record in treating poor, single mothers is grim, if not scandalous. 2 In fact, however, the book covers a much wider terrain. It not only describes and critiques a wide array of welfare state arrangements that do not target welfare mothers in particular, in areas such as health, housing, child care and education, but also includes an assessment of the contemporary American low-wage labour market. And it is to the reader's benefit that the authors go beyond their stated objective. America is indeed exceptional in its demonizing of single mothers, but tracing the roots of this phenomenon (which will probably reveal race-based explanations) is not the same as an institutional, bureaucratic and legal appraisal of American welfare and low-wage labour policy. And the latter, after all, is what the authors were after. The rift between the authors' stated and real objectives is never more apparent than in the fourth chapter of the book. Despite its title-'Demonizing the Single Mother Family'-it quickly moves beyond a discussion of this issue and into the realms of race, fraud and privatization. The broad and narrow objectives interlock and intertwine throughout the book. In American modern social policy parlance, welfare often does mean, to many, single mothers on benefits. But welfare policy, even when targeting (black) single mothers, actually affects a much larger population. Moreover, discussing welfare policy as if it consists only of aid in cash or kind to the poor ignores the larger context. First, the state distributes money to the rich as well as the poor (in the form of tax expenditures, subsidies, etc.).
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