An Emergency Handbrake for UK Welfare

ashmere
ashmere Community Member Posts: 80 Empowering

From the Rightsnet site

Tony Blair Institute calls for ‘non-work-limiting’ conditions to no longer lead to entitlement to benefits

Further to calls last year for action to stop people with less severe mental health problems from accessing disability benefits - from, among others, the Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary, the Shadow Chancellor, and Opposition leader Kemi Badenoch - and further to Reform UK leader Nigel Farage having said this week that mild anxiety is not a reason to be on disability benefits, the Tony Blair Institute (TBI) has called for welfare reform in relation to 'non-work-limiting' conditions:

On a daily basis, nearly 1,000 people in Britain sign on to benefits.

As part of the government’s effort to restore trust in the welfare system, we believe it could and should pull an emergency handbrake now that will slow the rise of claimants.

The handbrake is based on a simple idea: there are certain conditions that in the vast majority of cases do not limit an individual’s ability to work, and the default presumption should be that these “non-work-limiting” conditions no longer attract cash benefits. Many of these conditions are those that have proliferated since the pandemic, particularly mental-health conditions.

It is a handbrake that can be pulled now, using secondary legislation ahead of more significant reform later in this parliament ...

The TBI adds that, in addition to there being a moral and a fiscal imperative to reform the system:

This is an emergency handbrake informed by public sentiment. Exclusive polling commissioned by the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change and conducted by YouGov shows people are starting to tire of a system so clearly unfit for purpose. Around half of respondents believe that some of the conditions currently recognised by the system do not, in practice, limit people’s ability to work.

More: An emergency handbrake for UK welfare: Stabilising spending, supporting people

https://www.rightsnet.org.uk/now/post/70995

Comments

  • luvpink
    luvpink Community Member Posts: 4,741 Championing

    It doesn't surprise me one little bit.

    Liebour, the Tories and Reform have been saying similar things about their intention to reduce the disability benefits bill.

    I wonder what is meant by 'exclusive polling"? and who actually got to vote on these issues.

  • ColonelBlink
    ColonelBlink Community Member Posts: 792 Pioneering

    As long as the government are offering actual help for those with non-work-limiting conditions, this might nnot be such a bad thing.

    If, as i would expect, there is little to no practical, jobseeking help; then this proposal would amount to no more than a cost cutting exercise.

    Spending many years economically inactive is a real problem. It destroys self esteem, and may well lead to a worsening of one's health conditions. I really wish I had been provided with real support in 2010, but my pleas fell on deaf ears; I was left to waste my time applying for another job, competing with the able bodied.

  • ColonelBlink
    ColonelBlink Community Member Posts: 792 Pioneering
    edited April 28

    Modertors, please delete my second attempt. If indeed the initial post can be reclaimed from the filter!

  • SheffieldMan1976
    SheffieldMan1976 Posts: 1,897 Connected

    Ending benefit claiming in the UK? Won't happen, and never will, the right seriously needs to shut up.

  • SheffieldMan1976
    SheffieldMan1976 Posts: 1,897 Connected

    Indeed, some of the stuff I've been called online and in person because I can't get a job is literally unrepeatable in civlised conversation.

    All by people who have jobs but spend all their time on Facebook et al on work PCs when they should be doing actual work.

  • ColonelBlink
    ColonelBlink Community Member Posts: 792 Pioneering

    Who mentioned 'ending benefit claiming'? I read above about those with 'non-work-limiting' conditions.

  • Autumnleaf
    Autumnleaf Community Member Posts: 993 Empowering

    There should be a reasonable prospect of ability to work in order to say the condition is "non work limiting"

    Many disabled people would like to work if they could. Some may feel they can but are unable to get jobs. While this is also very much the case for healthy individuals, disabled people face additional barriers.

    I would say a significant barrier for some can be that employers will not take them on. This is very often the case.

  • SheffieldMan1976
    SheffieldMan1976 Posts: 1,897 Connected

    Indeed, I once volunteered at a local PDSA Charity shop, in fact it was 9 years last Tuesday since I left, because the battery died in my hearing aid, I went up to the staff room to ask a colleague to help me change it, and when he thought I couldn't hear him (and I did), he called me a deaf "C U Next Tuesday" (I'll let you fill the dots on that!)

    He's lucky I just walked away and didn't knock him into the following Wednesday.

  • SheffieldMan1976
    SheffieldMan1976 Posts: 1,897 Connected

    Don't watch TikTok, it's full of complete idiots who think they're famous because they have footage on there.