The so-called Taxpayers’ Alliance (TPA) is nothing if not
shamelessly immodest, so it was no surprise to see their latest magnum opus described as “A
major new report ... the next stage of welfare reform in the UK”. This
report, titled “Work for the Dole”,
can be read HERE
[.pdf] and is authored by Chris Philp, a businessman and former Tory
Parliamentary candidate.
More guff from Tufton Street
Some of the rationale used by Philp, together with anecdotal
evidence to give the impression that being unemployed and drawing benefits is
some kind of lifestyle choice, will
already be familiar to readers of ConservativeHome.
In the TPA report, he asserts that making people work for their benefits has
been shown to work in Canada and the USA, and so it should be done in the UK.
He also switches between citing reductions in welfare claims and welfare caseloads in his Stateside citations. That is unacceptable: let’s
see consistent comparisons. Another questionable assumption is that the level
of benefits is responsible for there being over 900,000 long-term unemployed.
But it is the costing of Philp’s central proposition – compulsory 30 hours a
week work – where it falls apart.
Philp assumes that 575,000 people will participate in this
programme, of which 110,000 are currently on Incapacity Benefit (IB) and a
further 80,000 on Employment Support Allowance (ESA). That puts him firmly in
the Ron Hopeful category. Moreover, the scheme’s budget includes only
supervisory, management and materials costs, the first two of which are highly
optimistic.
Participants are expected, therefore, to stand their own
travel and meal expenses. That’s a non-starter. Nor is any cost budgeted for
the organisations which will provide the work placements: perhaps these are
expected to materialise without any money changing hands. It is assumed that
those getting jobs will then no longer qualify for Housing Benefit at the level
previously claimed.
Worse, while the UK economy has generated just over 200,000
new jobs each year on average from 1997 to 2012, it is assumed that 345,000
will “come off welfare” in a year –
which begs the question of where their jobs will come from, especially as there
are others out there in the job market looking for work. As with so many TPA
reports, the figures just don’t add up.
On top of that, the TPA is assuming that Universal Credit (UC),
the flagship reform of Iain Duncan Cough, is introduced on time and throughout
the UK, when
right now the scheme is likely to miss its start date. It is not the only
such problem with the Coalition’s welfare reform efforts, as Sue Marsh has
pointed out in forthright style in a Comment
Is Free piece today. So the TPA’s rickety structure is built on sand.
Still, it generates
column inches from desperate tabloids, so
that’s all right, then.
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