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NZCPR
Guest Forum
Lindsay Mitchell
15 August 2010
Welfare
reform becomes political football - again
Earlier
this year the National government appointed a working group to
look at ways of reducing welfare dependence. The group has
consulted widely, too widely in my opinion. But they wanted to
be seen to be making a fair job of it. The conference they ran
at
Victoria
University
in June gave the first public indications that all would not
be plain sailing, and it was naive to assume it could be. The
traditional left/right divide became quickly apparent with
many attendees characterising the initiative as ‘beneficiary
bashing’. Prominent
in the detraction were Sue Bradford, the Child Poverty Action
Group, the ex Children’s Commissioner, and various church
and community groups who have latterly joined forces to form
an alternative welfare working group.
On
Monday last week the official
group released its first paper, Long-term
Benefit Dependency: The Issues. This 76 page report aims
to describe the problems inherent in the current system and
the dimensions of dependence. Its significance lies in the
second aim. Prior to this effort no real attempt has been made
to quantify how long people rely on benefits for. The Ministry
of Social Development provides data about average spells but
this ignores that many individuals have repeated stays on
welfare. Nothing is known about cumulative time spent
dependent. Additionally the Ministry only has individual
benefit history post 1996. Again this creates a substantial
shortfall in what is known about patterns of dependence.
However
the report looks at how long beneficiaries at June 2009 had
spent on welfare in the preceding 10 year period and found
that over 170,000 had “been on a benefit for most of the
past ten years”. It also identifies long-term dependence in
particular groups, importantly, those who start on welfare
very young. They are disproportionately Maori which
contributes to the startling finding that 40 percent of Maori
women in their 20s are on a benefit, usually the DPB.
It
contrasted overall welfare dependence in 2010 (13 percent of
the working age population) to 1960, when only 2 percent were
dependent. It also controversially calculated future
liabilities for those currently on welfare and produced a
figure of $50 billion.
The
responses to the report have been largely negative. They take
the form of denial or diversion. The Greens said the report
was an attempt to ‘manufacture a crisis’. This was picked
up by the media and affirmed by Guyon Espiner on Breakfast
television the following morning. Brian Rudman followed with a
column in the Herald pointing out that during the 1990s more
people had been on welfare but the economy had survived. What
Rudman doesn’t appreciate is that far more people were on
the unemployment benefit during that period. Long-term
dependence occurs primarily among DPB and Invalid’s
benefits. The number of people on either a sickness benefit (a
gateway benefit), or invalids benefit averaged 64,000 annually
through the nineties. Today the combined total exceeds 140,000
and is growing constantly. The DPB total is over 100,000 and
has fluctuated around this level for the last twenty years.
Note that this is despite the strong economy of the mid 2000s
when NZ briefly enjoyed the lowest unemployment rate in the
OECD.
Labour
leader Phil Goff went into denial and
diversion. According to the NZ Herald:
Labour
leader Phil Goff said that rather than a culture of long-term
welfare dependency, the numbers on benefits reflected economic
conditions. "It's not that people don't want to work; the
jobs simply aren't there at the moment and the situation's
getting worse."
There
is also a strong element of opportunism here. After all
National making welfare and unemployment an election issue is
a gift for Mr Goff.
What
Mr Goff ignores, but I suspect understands, is that long-term
dependence is caused by other factors beyond unemployment. If
he read the report he would discover that one of the
significant identified factors leading to long-term dependence
is entering the benefit system aged 16 and 17. This group has
the greatest risk of staying on welfare long-term. It is clear to me
that an expectation of eligibility for a benefit leads to
educational under-effort and a subsequent failure to acquire
skills or qualifications. Over time these youngsters make up
an increasing share of the total reliant at any given time.
A
further factor leading to long-term dependence is people
adding children to an existing benefit, also detailed in the
paper, along with the passivity of the current benefit system.
Mr Goff refuses to acknowledge that even when the economy is
strong the deeply entrenched dependence problem persists.
Therefore other factors beyond job scarcity are driving it.
Unfortunately
the easiest message for the public to absorb is, there
are no jobs. And they will be inundated with this mantra
from the very loud and well-organised groups best described as
on the left of the political spectrum. The protests from
opposition politicians and the alternative welfare working
group will produce the squeakiest wheel despite being shallow
in their content.
At
the outset of the June conference Paula Bennett warned that
this exercise would get nasty. She was right. For example,
from the Labour- supporting left blog, The Standard
“…
nothing shrivels a Tory heart like the idea of sharing their
wealth. While unable to deny the need, they become so obsessed
with the small minority of bludgers that they can’t help but
attack the system, and in doing so they attack the support for
the overwhelming majority of perfectly genuine welfare
recipients.”
When
I politely responded to this assertion, pointing out that for
many, wanting welfare reform is not about meanness but concern
about the damage it is doing I was told to f.___ off back to
my ACT mates. I relate this to illustrate that the old class
warfare mentality is alive and kicking and the expression of
it will dominate the debate provoked by the welfare working
group.
In
turn this cannot but have an effect on how far the government
will be prepared to go when the group makes its
recommendations at the year end. The people who will oppose
those recommendations do not sit around saying they can’t
make a difference. They
will use their considerable collective capacity to turn public
opinion their way.
And
what of the views of those who want to see more
New Zealand
children realise their potential in life rather than grow up
with the same low expectations and sense of entitlement as
their parents? Who are alarmed at the economic implications of
allowing long-term dependence to continue growing? Who are
convinced that welfare has had a hugely detrimental impact on
the family?
Don’t
wait for the media to come looking for them. Sensible is not
sexy.
Which
is why the Issues Paper provides an opportunity for every
interested party to make their view known. It poses a number
of questions that can be answered as briefly or as fully as
your time permits. But make the effort because this government
is as poll-driven as any other. They need to know they have
support for change. They need a mandate to accept at least
some of the recommendations that the group will make in
December this year. Don’t let the naysayers carry the day
again. If this opportunity is lost we may wait years for
another.
http://ips.ac.nz/WelfareWorkingGroup/Index.html
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