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Benefits Cap is working
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grumFree Member
@grum, I don’t think @notlocal has been taken in by propaganda he’s telling us what he sees first hand as a front line paramedic.
Some of the scumbags abusing our staff are actually “earning” a higher standard of living, but choose to piss it up the wall/into a vein/smoke and eat themselves to death.
So how does he know all this? All he knows is the way they behave in encounters with paramedics – the rest of this is pure supposition/hearsay and sounds like it could come straight from a Daily Mail editorial.
I also thn you’re being cute with statistics about benefits going to the elderly. Pensions are not a benefit. If you factor in the disability benefits and associated payments those over 65 are not the main recipients.
Re state pensions – they are part of the welfare system. They are paid to everyone regardless of whether they’ve worked a day in their lives or not. You can claim it’s somehow different if you like, but it’s not.
Do these ‘scummers’ people are moaning about suddenly become deserving once they reach pension age BTW?
‘Being cute with statistics’ = stating facts. But if they don’t fit in with your prejudices you’ll just discount them I suppose.
hexhamstuFree MemberThe average loophole exploiter is already contributing to society, the benefits scrounger does nothing but take from it.
Oh, that’s OK then.
konabunnyFree MemberRent control wouldn’t be a bad idea either.
It’s a crap idea. Once it’s in, it never gets raised enough to make it worthwhile for landlords to maintain the buildings and it all goes to shit. Why should landlords pay for market failure?
NYC has a dwindling amount of rent control and it’s one of the biggest middle class scams around – those who have rent controlled apartments either get subsidized to live in a swankier part of town than they would be willing to pay for while everyone else commutes, or they illegally sublet and cream off a profit for nothing.
konabunnyFree MemberCan someone tell me what a family of 4 from an EU country is entitled to as soon as they step off the plane please.
I suppose “a hearty welcome” probably isn’t the right answer.
teamhurtmoreFree MemberGood news that 3,000 people are working rather than claiming benefits above all FOR THEM. Widely recognised that work is the best solution so churlish not to welcome that news. Ditto the fact that overall UN is likely to fall below (a still high) 7% this year and that the economic recovery is becoming more entrenched.
Whether that is an indirect result of the introduction off the benefits cap is another issue altogether, so Lord Freud is correct with the “encouraging” comment but perhaps not in his attempt to argue the causation. Lots of factors are likely to be involved.
Despite flaws in design, the benefit cap enjoys an unusually high level of public support if polls are to be believed and broad x-party consensus (with debates on the structure) So in that different context, then it would seem to be working.
El-bentFree MemberDespite flaws in design, the benefit cap enjoys an unusually high level of public support if polls are to be believed and broad x-party consensus
Does anyone want to argue the case that no one believes what the Government tells them, particularity when it is written so colourfully through the media?
I suppose its Human nature to blame someone other than ourselves, for the problems that have been created in “society.”
Rent control wouldn’t be a bad idea either.
It’s a crap idea. Once it’s in, it never gets raised enough to make it worthwhile for landlords to maintain the buildings and it all goes to shit. Why should landlords pay for market failure?
Rent controls were abolished in the 1950’s. If you look at somewhere like Notting hill back then, it was a slum where the poor were housed, now the houses are bought by the wealthy for many millions.
So whether rent controls would encouraged landlords not to maintain buildings, the current situation of no controls has led the poor to be ejected, so either way they are screwed.
The poor or working poor have to live somewhere if they are to continue to service the needs of the economy as a source of cheapish labour, all we, and I mean the ones further up the ladder, are doing is cutting back on the support network that helps these people continue to do this, in our mean attitudes and collective rush to fill our pockets, be that as landlords ourselves(some of you are), or through cutting the benefits system.
If we cannot be responsible for each other, through all peaks and troughs, then there is no society.
JunkyardFree MemberTax avoidance is perfectly legal and I can’t blame anyone for doing it and don’t see it as a problem.
Why do you have a problem with benefit scroungers doing the same – both exploiting societies rules for personal gain?
why would someone not exploit the tax rules to minimise their tax bill
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They dont need the money and they have a moral conscience – not every person or company does this only the really selfish ones.
You think folk admire Ebay, amazon , starbucks etc for their noble actions? Non doms etc. We dont hear much about them because they set the agenda.Who’s going to pay more tax than they have to? I got my bike on the c2w scheme to be more tax efficient rather than buying it with cash or interest free credit, therefore I’m avoiding tax.
Its a bit pointless to compare you to folk who avoid millions by elaborate tax arrangements and trust funds and/or companies who avoid billions with an individual who has an ISA or does c2W.
I don’t get a pay rise from my boss if we were to have another child, and neither do those working people who are earning less than some take home in benefits and also contribute to the tax system.
I think you need to avail yourself of the rules- eveyone is bette roff in work – the system is designed to achieve this – the net gain may be marginal [ less than a tenner ] but you are always better off in work.
Child benefit and working tax credits would both increase so they would both get a “rise” from the benefits system.
I doubt knowing the actual facts will change your opinion though.
They have another mouth to feed – would you rather the child suffered so you can feel better about the scroungers?The average loophole exploiter is already contributing to society, the benefits scrounger does nothing but take from it.
Both are giving less than they should and taking more than they should.
Both exploit societies rules for their own personal gain
One gets demonised one is admired [ the ones who take the most]
I fail to see why tbh neither is good and I know which costs us the most.the benefit cap enjoys an unusually high level of public support if polls are to be believed
So would the death penalty
Its like a number of ourcitizenssubjects are **** ….you can decide which ones on this issue 😉I can see why, considering the misrepresentation of life on benefits, why working folk are angry but they are other things that cost us much more that they are comfortable with.
they dislike poor exploiters and admire rich exploiters….its the Tory way.
Neither are admirable to me and both need tackling.mudsharkFree MemberThe likes of Ebay and Amazon choosing to pay tax in a tax efficient way is really the obligation they have to their shareholders. The problem is countries who set themselves up with low rates of tax in order to attract business to be based there – in a global economy this has a terrible net effect.
footflapsFull MemberDespite flaws in design, the benefit cap enjoys an unusually high level of public support if polls are to be believed and broad x-party consensus (with debates on the structure) So in that different context, then it would seem to be working.
However, the price we have paid for this ‘support’ is very high. We have gone from a society which was sympathetic to the disabled and indifferent to the unemployed to one which is becoming increasingly hostile to both. This cannot be a good thing.
Yes some people exploit benefits, they always have and always will, but to label everyone on benefits as ‘scum’ stealing from the ‘hard working masses’ is a national disgrace.
Rusty-ShacklefordFree MemberI don’t like the idea of ‘benefits scroungers’ any more than the next well-adjusted Daily Hate reader, but let’s not loose sight of the bigger picture…
teamhurtmoreFree MemberBeyond the headlines, the number of people abusing the benefits system is relatively small. So universal labels (“scum”) etc, to the extent that they actually exist beyond sensational headlines, are clearly wrong. As it’s the notion that we are a nation that is hostile to the disabled or the unemployed. Like the use of words like “scum” that idea does not hold up to scrutiny. The UK has an imperfect but still largely impressive system of looking after the needy of all sorts.
The Tories and labour both agree that the balance between rewards to working and support from benefits needs to be addressed but they disagree on the means. On the broad issue, they do have strong national support.
JunkyardFree MemberAs it’s the notion that we are a nation that is hostile to the disabled or the unemployed.
The problem is. like immigration, that the loud shouty voices [ of the far right but this is not a political point, is often heard the loudest.
Couple this. like the EU , where all the media stories are negative of scroungers rather than tales of honest hard working folk who have fallen in hard times and now need food banks to feed their families despite working for the last 25 years.The UK has an imperfect but still largely impressive system of looking after the needy of all sorts.
Indeed we do and we should be proud of it rather than having a chancellor pointing out how much the EU spends on benefits v the world and presenting it like it is a bad thing.
As you note its a minority who abuse the system but the agenda is always about them and never about those who fall through the gaps and are in real hardship, loosing houses, unable to eat etc
footflapsFull MemberThe Tories and labour both agree that the balance between rewards to working and support from benefits needs to be addressed but they disagree on the means. On the broad issue, they do have strong national support.
Only because Labour and the Lib Dems have failed to challenge any of the nonsense pedalled by the Tories. The unemployed and disabled are being scapegoated for the drop in living standard of the middle classes and no one seems prepared to stand up to this.
We have tabloid papers, egged on my the Tory party, happy to peddle half truths about the massive benefit cost (ignoring the facts it’s half pensions) and that we cannot afford it (when we obviously can). We have endless extreme examples given as ‘typical’ cases of excessive benefit payments.
From a purely budgetary standpoint, the cost of benefits and benefit fraud is far less than tax avoidance by the rich, yet one is never discussed and the other is a major issue which ‘must’ be addressed.
This is not about economics or fairness it’s a ideological agenda about persecuting those who are least able to defend themselves.
grumFree MemberAs it’s the notion that we are a nation that is hostile to the disabled or the unemployed.
Can’t find it now but I seem to remember an opinion poll showing that we are becoming increasingly more so.
As JY says, yes by world standard we are great at looking after the disabled and unemployed – why are we constantly being told this is a bad thing rather than something to be proud of?
footflaps +1
Depressing to see so many people falling for it.
footflapsFull MemberCan’t find it now but I seem to remember an opinion poll showing that we are becoming increasingly more so.
http://www.scope.org.uk/news/attitudes-towards-disabled-people-survey
clubberFree MemberCan’t find it now but I seem to remember an opinion poll showing that we are becoming increasingly more so.
Is that a general trend or one that’s affected by recession? Or more specifically, will that same poll show us becoming less hostile as people (in general) are less hard up?
footflapsFull MemberIs that a general trend or one that’s affected by recession? Or more specifically, will that same poll show us becoming less hostile as people (in general) are less hard up?
It’s not rocket science:
There has been a significant drop in living standards in the UK since 2008. No shit, we had a financial crash.
However, from day 1, the coalition have been continually telling us, via the media and directly, that we have a massive unmanageable deficit all due to the unemployed and disabled living a life of riley, whilst the hard working families stay less well off BECAUSE of the deficit and therefore the unemployed / disabled.
Not a lot of mention of global economic conditions, reckless behaviour by the banks, oh no, that’s nothing to do with it. Everything is wrong because the poor are stealing your money in benefit fraud!
D0NKFull Memberrusty your second graphic makes my eyes hurt
I do empathise with people born into what must seem like impossible situations, but on the flipside, have no time for those that won’t help themselves.
mrs told me about a girl who lives near her surestart centre, she was confused by these people turning up everyday and asked why they came. “We come here to work to earn money to buy things”
“but my parents don’t and we have things”
Girl was 9ish so still a way to go to learn about life, but how does someone who is 3rd or 4th generation benefits claimant with no concept of work help themselves? There’s got to be some sort of outreach to them, not kicking all the ladders away and waiting for them to climb out of the pit themselves.Grum haven’t you got powder to shred*?
* pretty sure you don’t shred powder but meh.
grumFree MemberGirl was 9ish so still a way to go to learn about life, but how does someone who is 3rd or 4th generation benefits claimant with no concept of work help themselves?
The Joseph Rowntree Foundation published a study in December testing whether there were three generations of the same family that had never worked. Despite dogged searching, researchers were unable to find such families. If they exist, they account for a minuscule fraction of workless people. Under 1% of workless households might have two generations who have never worked – about 15,000 households in the UK. Families with three such generations will therefore be even fewer.
Having a day off today DONK – it’s snowing really heavily so visibility is poor and I’m a bit knackered. Tomorrow should be grand though and I will be shredding mad pow with my gnarpoon again. 🙂
hexhamstuFree MemberI’d like to stand behind junkyard and just say “yeah!” after every paragraph.
bigblackshedFull MemberFootflaps.
You mention The Great Deficit Swindle. I can’t remember the source of the quote, “The Tories, cutting the N out of cuts”, but it has pinpoint accuracy.
footflapsFull MemberTo quote Joseph Goebbels:
If you repeat a lie often enough, people will believe it, and you will even come to believe it yourself.
teamhurtmoreFree Memberyes by world standard we are great at looking after the disabled and unemployed – why are we constantly being told this is a bad thing rather than something to be proud of?
Are we? Confirmation bias, or perhaps a more selective choice of news source is required. I have yet to hear a politician say that we should not be proud of looking after the disabled and the unemployed. I have heard quite a few argue that we could do it better mind.
In the last few weeks, the much chastised IDS:
said people should stop “disapproving” of people on benefits, whom he terms “our fellow citizens”, and instead blame politicians for creating a failing welfare system that traps people on benefits.
MoreCashThanDashFull MemberWorth remembering that the big jump in housing benefit costs was due to a former “socialist” government ignoring all the expert advice and introducing local housing allowance.
The current bunch of Muppets are just making a pigs ear of trying to control it again.
D0NKFull MemberDespite dogged searching, researchers were unable to find such families.
sorry that was our guess….probably based on cobblers media reports. Does the point still stand tho? that some have no concept of work?
day off? sorry does not compute 🙂
MSPFull Membersaid people should stop “disapproving” of people on benefits, whom he terms “our fellow citizens”, and instead blame politicians for creating a failing welfare system that traps people on benefits.
Confirmation bias, political rhetoric that doesn’t match his actions.
former “socialist” government
Nothing socialist about nu labour.
D0NKFull MemberWorth remembering that the big jump in housing benefit costs was due to a former “socialist” government
was it not helped by private landlords
milking the statetaking advantage of the market and putting up their prices and the previous previous government flogging a load of the council housing?JunkyardFree MemberLOL you say confirmation bias whilst claiming you have never heard a politician say anything bad about benefits to the unemployed [ which is a straw man as that is not what the quote says anyway]
You have both used clumsy language tbh and I am sure you know what they meant – they always bash the system never praise it – you saying no politician does this?
Your broader point is also true generally everyone accepts they should exist the debate is about what the level is
EDIT: that IDS speech is somewhere between delusional – who he comapres himself/his mission with and quite good
the big jump in housing benefit costs was due to a former “socialist” government ignoring all the expert advice and introducing local housing allowance
It was introduced in 2008 and was designed to reduce HB costs.
To blame the “socialists” for HB is somewhat at odd with reality and just lets us know how right wing and blue tinted your glasses arekonabunnyFree MemberSo whether rent controls would encouraged landlords not to maintain buildings, the current situation of no controls has led the poor to be ejected, so either way they are screwed.
Bit of a weird argument: A doesn’t work but neither is B, so we should do A again.
ircFree MemberI’d question the accuracy of the claimed 1% figure for benefit fraud. By it’s very nature fraud is hard to detect. Someone might claim benefits by claiming to live alone while living with a partner earning a good wage. How will that be detected?
1% detected benefit fraud maybe.
binnersFull MemberCan I just make a prediction?
On looking into my crystal ball, I foresee that the utterly incompetent IDS’s Universal Credit (and the caps, and benefits reforms generally) will rapidly dissolve into the biggest cluster-**** that this country has ever seen. And theres been a good few.
It already appears to have become an utter shambles that, far from producing the savings predicted, will end up costing billions. This is what happens when you let ideology, rather than any actual evidence, dictate policy. IDS has been repeatedly exposed as peddling shameless disinformation to justify further cuts. The problem seems to be that he appears to actually believe the figures he’s pulling out of the air
I suspect a lot of the shouty, finger-pointy stuff at benefits ‘scum’, sorry … ‘claimants, is largely a cover to distract from this almighty **** up!
The whole thing is going to end up as a completely unworkable farce, which will end up costing vast sums of money, while making the lives of millions of people imeasurably more miserable
teamhurtmoreFree MemberThis is what happens when you let ideology, rather than any actual evidence, dictate policy.
Well Binners it may get even worse! Ed Balls will not only broadly follow suit, he will also add pensions to the cap. These politicians must be cut from the same cloth! It’s shocking isn’t it and to think that so many folk fall for it?
The whole thing is going to end up as a completely unworkable farce,
End up???
grumFree MemberAre we? Confirmation bias, or perhaps a more selective choice of news source is required.
What a stupid thing to say. The tabloid press is full of vile demonisation of people on benefits. I don’t read them, but I see the headlines. Plus both the main parties make similar-sounding noises.
One cherry-picked quote from IDS doesn’t prove anything.
Ed Balls will not only broadly follow suit, he will also add pensions to the cap.
If there’s going to be a cap (which basically solves nothing) – why shouldn’t it be applied to pensions too?
binnersFull MemberWell Binners it may get even worse! Ed Balls will not only broadly follow suit, he will also add pensions to the cap. These politicians must be cut from the same cloth! It’s shocking isn’t it and to think that so many folk fall for it?
Indeed. Thats a neo-liberal consensus for you. I’d blame Thatcher, but actually its mainly Blairs fault
teamhurtmoreFree MemberYou have proved the point Grum – the tabloid press. Exactly. If I was you I would ignore the headlines especially. The text is bad enough, but the headlines……..
Of course one quote form IDS does not prove anything. But still waiting to see the quotes that show a politician who claims that we “should not be proud of looking after the disabled and the unemployed.”
My choice of words was very precise.
footflapsFull MemberIt’s all completely insane and economically unsound, concentrate on very expensive to implement changes to a system which will make an insignificant difference to the total costs of benefits, whilst offering absolutely no policies for encouraging growth.
What’s more shameful is that all three parties are equally complicit in this failure of leadership.
Basically, blame the poor and hope the economy picks up in the meantime (of it’s own accord) and then we can say ‘told you so, it was the poor all along’.
footflapsFull MemberBut still waiting to see the quotes that show a politician who claims that we “should not be proud of looking after the disabled and the unemployed.”
They’re not that stupid, they set the sentiment and let the friendly tabloids to their dirty work.
grumFree MemberOf course one quote form IDS does not prove anything. But still waiting to see the quotes that show a politician who claims that we “should not be proud of looking after the disabled and the unemployed.”
Well I didn’t specify politicians did I? Or specify that particular phrase. It’s the general atmosphere deliberately created by the press and government.
You’re straw-manning yet again.
Why should we ignore what the tabloid press is doing, especially when so many people believe it, and it then informs government policy? Because it doesn’t suit the spurious point you are trying to argue?
teamhurtmoreFree Member‘told you so, it was the poor all along’.
Source? There are serious politicians and commentators saying that, really? I must have missed those headlines that attribute the crisis directly to the poor.
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