Focus on jobs, not benefits, to cut welfare bill, says thinktank
The Guardian World ·

Tackling the root causes of joblessness, instead of cutting benefits, is the best way to get the welfare bill down, and polling shows voters support that approach, according to research by the Joseph …
Tackling the root causes of joblessness, instead of cutting benefits, is the best way to get the welfare bill down, and polling shows voters support that approach, according to research by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation. In a forthcoming report, JRF economists show that hitting the government’s target of getting 80% of the working age population into jobs would cut the cost of universal credit by £10bn – an eighth of the current bill. The research seeks to push back against the “dominant political narrative” that spending on social security is “spiralling”. Instead, it points out that official projections show spending on non-pensioner benefits “will remain flat, at around 5% of GDP for the remainder of the parliament”. Sam Tims, JRF’s lead analyst, said: “We know what happens when the holes in the safety net are made ever bigger. The reasons people need support don’t disappear, instead low-income families go hungry. “So government should focus on the root causes of economic insecurity. These are the underlying economic failures that drive social security need – like the decent jobs that need to be created, the affordable homes we need, and better health.” A survey of more than 4,000 voters by the pollster More in Common, carried out alongside the JRF research, showed that when asked how the government should reduce the welfare bill, 59% supported the idea of reducing it in the longer term by tackling the underlying causes. …
Original source: The Guardian World