Welfare

Welfare reform needed to prevent long-term dependency


According to official figures, almost two million people are now unemployed in the UK. That number is rising rapidly as the economy shrinks.

This means extra expenditure on welfare benefits, putting further financial pressure on a government already deeply in debt.

More worrying still, hundreds of thousands of families will now be at risk of falling into long-term welfare dependency, with negative implications in terms of crime, family breakdown and ill-health.

Many of those made redundant, particularly the low-paid, will face strong disincentives to re-entering employment once they start receiving benefits. For every pound they earn above a certain level, they may lose 65p in housing benefit and 20p in council tax benefit. They must also pay significant income tax and national insurance – even at minimum wage rates.

There is therefore a real danger that the economic slowdown will lead to a structural rise in the number of long-term benefit claimants. Before the slump there were already around five million working-age individuals on various out-of-work benefits.

The depths of recession may seem like the worst possible time to reform radically Britain’s welfare system. Yet it is in periods of mass redundancy that change is most desperately needed to avoid growth in dependency. While the economic climate may prove challenging for US-style ‘welfare-to-work’ schemes, it is essential that the government adjusts tax and benefit rates to improve the financial incentives for unemployed people to return to work.

All the talk is about demand management. We must remember that how long unemployment continues rising for will depend, largely, on whether there is supply-side reform. Deregulation, lower and simpler taxes, benefit reform and a reconsideration of the level of the minimum wage must all be on the opposition and government’s agenda.

Deputy Research Director & Head of Transport

Richard Wellings was formerly Deputy Research Director at the Institute of Economic Affairs. He was educated at Oxford and the London School of Economics, completing a PhD on transport and environmental policy at the latter in 2004. He joined the Institute in 2006 as Deputy Editorial Director. Richard is the author, co-author or editor of several papers, books and reports, including Towards Better Transport (Policy Exchange, 2008), A Beginner’s Guide to Liberty (Adam Smith Institute, 2009), High Speed 2: The Next Government Project Disaster? (IEA , 2011) and Which Road Ahead - Government or Market? (IEA, 2012). He is a Senior Fellow of the Cobden Centre and the Economic Policy Centre.


2 thoughts on “Welfare reform needed to prevent long-term dependency”

  1. Posted 03/11/2008 at 14:19 | Permalink

    It is interesting how much faster unemployment fell (after output stopped falling) following the 1990’s recession compared with after the 1980’s recession. There were many factors at work here, one of which was the improved supply-side condition of the economy. If politicians do not address this, people will be unemployed for longer, their skills will deteriorate further, their productivity then declines and there is a vicious circle.

  2. Posted 03/11/2008 at 14:19 | Permalink

    It is interesting how much faster unemployment fell (after output stopped falling) following the 1990’s recession compared with after the 1980’s recession. There were many factors at work here, one of which was the improved supply-side condition of the economy. If politicians do not address this, people will be unemployed for longer, their skills will deteriorate further, their productivity then declines and there is a vicious circle.

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