Christianity and Social Justice: exploring the meaning of welfare reform

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This presentation was given to the Archbishop of York and to bishops from the North East of England and Yorkshire. It explores the current crisis in the welfare state in the UK, the myths that dominate thinking and outlines the Christian case for some new and deeper thinking about the purpose and design of the welfare state.

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Christianity & Social Justiceexploring the meaning of welfare reform

Dr Simon Duffy ■ The Centre for Welfare Reform ■ 11th September 2013 ■ Meeting of Bishops, Bishopthorpe Palace, York, YO23 2GE

Dr Simon Duffy

• Worked with disabled people for 24 years; invented personal budgets and other social innovations; founded and led several charities and services.

• Awarded RSA Prince Albert Medal 2008 and SPA Award for Outstanding Contribution in Social Policy 2011.

• Christian, philosopher and writer with a special interest in ethics and social justice.

• Director of The Centre for Welfare Reform, Chair of the Housing & Support Alliance, Policy Advisor to the Campaign for a Fair Society and Senior Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Birmingham.

• Not a member of any particular political party.

1. The welfare state is under attack

2. Our understanding of welfare is confused

3. The Church could help us rethink welfare

What’s wrong with the welfare state?

After meeting with community groups in the North of England a Finnish researcher asked:

“What’s the problem with ‘welfare’? In Finnish it just means ‘well being’”

Today ‘welfare reform’ is a central political project.

The current government - building on the work of the previous government - is pursuing policies that are justified in strong moral terms and which seek to increase employment, personal responsibility and stronger communities.

However, as these goals are converted into practical policies and media soundbites they often seem to reinforce bigotry, ignorance and injustice.

[NB. The “Benefit Thieves” Campaign was developed by New Labour.]

The terms ‘austerity’ and ‘fairness’ are used to justify cuts in public spending and welfare reforms.

but these cuts target the very people that a fair society should protect.

not everything is cut, and some cuts are deeper

local government and benefits face deepest cuts

£72 billion of cuts

Most cuts fall in two areas:

Child Benefit freezeAbolition of Sure Start Maternity for second and subsequent children

Change to CPI indexation of benefits Reductions in support for carers

Replacing DLA with PIP Child Benefit clawback from higher rate taxpayers

Time-limiting of contributory ESATransfer of Social Fund to local government

Council Tax Benefit – 10% reduction and localisation

Extension of JSA lone parents with a youngest child aged 5-6

Housing Benefit cuts Household Benefit cap

Abolition of the Independent Living Fund

Continued use of ATOS or others

Universal Credit Reductions in ‘Access to Work’ funding

Closure of Remploy services Abolition of the Child Trust Fund

Tax credit changesAbolition of the Health in Pregnancy Grant

Abolition of the Child Trust Fund Abolition of the ESA youth rules

government controls over 40% of GDP

but most cuts are targeted in just a few areas

60% of local government is social care

The cuts in benefits and the cuts in social care fall disproportionately on two overlapping groups: people in poverty and disabled people (including children and frail older people).

They fall hardest of all on people with the most severe disabilities, who rely on both benefits and social care.

There is no discussion of the real cause of the current crisis:

over-borrowing by home owners & over-lending by

banks.

debt was fed by a housing bubble

interest rates are now at unusually low levels

this creates a hidden redistribution towards mortgage holders

‘Welfare reform’ has become code for a redistribution of resources away from the poorest and towards the better off.

In the competition for political power politicians are taking care to ensure that they target benefits on swing voters: home owners, families with two employed parents, middle-income earners.

The median voter is more important than any other. We live in a medianocracy.

Most of what we think we know about welfare is false...

debate is dominated by powerful myths.

•The welfare state caused the current crisis

•The welfare state benefits the poor

•The welfare state taxes the rich

•The welfare state encourages fraud & idleness

•The welfare state must be centralised

•The welfare state must be in control

welfare myths

public expenditure has changed little

benefits are not technically public expenditure - they are a form of income

adjustment

the poorest pay the highest levels of taxation

benefits fraud is dwarfed by fraud by taxpayers and by government itself

there are very few fit and healthy working age adults who just rely on benefits

the UK is the second most centralised welfare state in the world (after New

Zealand)

we do not need to treat services as professionally defined gifts - we can have

entitlements

Overheard at a public policy conference in London:

“The welfare state exists for the benefit of the poor.”

This statement was made, without irony, by a senior academic and made to a room full of public servants, politicians, think-tankers and others; all of whom are utterly dependent on the patronage of the welfare state. What other people get is a ‘hand out’, while what I receive is an entitlement. We are blind to the entitlements of others; but all too eager to expand our own sense of entitlement.

Perhaps welfare myths flourish for a purpose...

to assure us of our own superiority.

The welfare state’s a good thing...

it’s just designed wrong.

Without systems of collective security - welfare - human life descends into fear, terror, revolution and war.

1. The first principle is that any proposals for the future, while they should use to the full the experience gathered in the past, should not be restricted by consideration of sectional interests established in the obtaining of that experience. Now, when the war is abolishing landmarks of every kind, is the opportunity for using experience in a clear field. A revolutionary moment in the world's history is a time for revolutions, not for patching.2. The second principle is that organisation of social insurance should be treated as one part only of a comprehensive policy of social progress. Social insurance fully developed may provide income security; it is an attack upon Want. But Want is one only of five giants on the road of reconstruction and in some ways the easiest to attack. The others are Disease, Ignorance, Squalor and Idleness.3. The third principle is that social security must be achieved by co-operation between the State and the individual. The State should offer security for service and contribution. The State in organising security should not stifle incentive, opportunity, responsibility; in establishing a national minimum, it should leave room and encouragement for voluntary action by each individual to provide more than that minimum for himself and his family.

William Beveridge

How might such martial language mislead us?

the foundation of the welfare state

•Meritocracy - most people lack the capacity to make good decisions for themselves

•Centralisation - power and control needs to be centralised

•Standardisation - equity is more about procedural uniformity than about resources or opportunities

•Individualisation - firms, communities, Churches friends and family will always be there, and so can be taken for granted

faulty design assumptions

we developed a poverty net

We have little faith in the 'average sensual man', we do not believe that he can do more than describe his grievances, we do not think he can prescribe the remedies

Beatrice Webb

Collectivism has put all their eggs in one basket. I do not think that Mr Shaw believes, or that anybody, believes, that 12,000,000 men, say, carry the basket, or look after the basket, or have any real distributed control over the eggs in the basket. I believe that it is controlled from the centre by a few people. They may be quite right or quite necessary. A certain limit to that sort of control any sane man will recognise as necessary: it is not the same thing as the Commons controlling the means of production. It is a few oligarchs or a few officials who do in fact control all the means of production.

G K Chesterton

Fabian centralism defeated other perspectives

Pruitt Igoe Urban Housing Project: 1952-1968

•Elitism - power and control is concentrated in the hands of powerful private and public elites

•Isolation - people are increasingly cut off from each other and the means to rich and meaningful lives

•Poverty - differences in income are growing, freedom for leisure and personal development diminishing

•Stigma - some of us are increasingly marked out as less worthy, less valuable or a threat to society

•Despair - mental illness, hopelessness and a growing sense of spiritual emptiness

have we created five new giants?

The aim of a Christian social order is the fullest possible development of individual personality in the widest and deepest possible fellowship.

William Temple

The [new 1834] Poor Law treated the claims of the poor, not as an integral part of the rights of the citizen, but as an alternative to them - as claims which could be met only if the claimants ceased to be citizens in any true sense of the world.

T H Marshall

this was not the aim of early designers

the goal should be citizenship

There are eight degrees of charity, one higher than the other. The highest degree, exceeded by none, is that of the person who assists a poor Jew by providing him with a gift or loan or by accepting him into a business partnership or by helping him find employment - in a word, by putting him where he can dispense with other people's aid.

Maimonides

and the means to citizenship, should be citizenship

Womencentre in Halifax

PFG in Doncaster

Talbot School in Sheffield

Cornerstone Cafe in Newcastle

True love is excess of justice, excess that goes farther than justice, but never destruction of justice, which must be and must remain the basic form of love.

Benedict XVI

It is axiomatic that Love should be the predominant Christian impulse, and that the primary form of love in social organisation is Justice.

William Temple

Christ does not call his benefactors loving or charitable. He calls them just. The Gospel makes no distinction between the love of our neighbour and justice. In the eyes of the Greeks also a respect for Zeus the suppliant was the first duty of justice. We have invented the distinction between justice and charity. It is easy to understand why.

Simone Weil

The Christian call for social justice is central to our faith and our role in the

world

Its time for a new settlement

Elements of a reformed welfare system:

Human rights and clear

entitlements

Diverse, accessible and vibrant

communities

More support for families

Social innovation and dynamism

Diverse and vibrant communities

Diverse and vibrant communities

Guaranteed minimums and

increased equalityUniversal securities and

fair taxes

Increased choice and control for

citizens

Professional integrity and

independence

Ecological sustainability

Constitutionalreform Global justice

The Church may not have all the answers...

but it can ask the right

questions.

•Increasing parliamentary scrutiny - cf. WOW Campaign and demand for a Cumulative Impact Assessment.

•Role of the Church in attacking myths and restoring truth to the debate.

•Collaboration and exploration of social innovation and community partnerships.

•Deeper conversations about welfare reform and the purpose of the welfare state.

for more info: www.centreforwelfarereform.org

or contact: simon@centreforwelfarereform.org

Possible further reading: