The Welfare State We're In, The website of the book by James Bartholomew
January 05, 2010
Tuesday
Housing benefit provides the biggest discouragement to work


In the great roll call of this government’s failures and blunders, its record on housing benefit deserves to have a prominent place. This was the government that was going to “think the unthinkable” on welfare benefits. Instead it “did the predictable”. Instead of embarking on radical reform like the administration of President Clinton in America, it opted to muddle along. It talked big and acted small.

Housing benefit is arguably the worst of all the benefit failures. Why? For two important reasons. One, it costs an amazing amount of money after nearly doubling since Labour came to power to £20 billion. That – for those who can bear the idea – amounts to £692 for every working person in Britain. Most people imagine that Jobseekers’ Allowance is the big, key welfare benefit. Not at all. Housing benefit costs more than three times as much.

The second and even more important reason why this failure matters is that housing benefit is probably the biggest single discouragement to the low-skilled unemployed to getting a job. Get a job and you lose housing benefit at a rapid rate. So housing benefit is one of the most important reason why more one in four people of working age are not working.

The official cost of £20 billion is just the beginning. Nearly all the people who are discouraged from working are also getting other benefits including Jobseekers’ Allowance and – in many cases - Incapacity Benefit or Income Support. But worse even than that is the effect on the morale and culture of those at the lower end of society who get accustomed to welfare dependency. It causes depression and alienation and contributes to uncivil and even criminal behaviour.

There is a simple rule for creating sound welfare benefits. It was described 175 years ago in the report of a Royal Commission into the operation of the poor laws. The commissioners decided that benefits should not be more advantageous than the income that would be obtained by the individual taking on low-paid work. It is as simple as that. Work must always pay. .

On radio phone-ins I have often heard people exclaim: “Do you realise how little you get on Jobseekers’ Allowance? You can’t live on that!” Unfortunately interviewers – being part of the upper middle class - rarely understand that the Jobseekers’ Allowance and other benefits are normally accompanied by other benefits such as a free school meals and, very likely, the big one: housing benefit. Only when they are all added together do they amount to a meaty discouragement to work for the low-paid.

It will come as a surprise to many people to know that not all countries pay housing benefit – or at least not to as many classes of people as Britain does. In Italy, for example, an unmarried teenage mother does not climb up the council housing queue, get income support and housing benefit. She is expected to live with her parents or other relatives or perhaps the father of the child. The result is that there is far less unmarried parenting in Italy than here. They make their decisions and live with them. That means they make better decisions.

If there were prizes for tinkering with the welfare benefit system, this government would certainly win the gold trophy. I used to get press releases from the old Department of Social Security as it was called. If I had had a strange notion of interior decoration, I could have wall-papered my bedroom with them within a few weeks.

To be fair, some reforms have gone in the right direction. James Purnell, when he was in charge, decided that people should only get benefit to pay for a maximum of five bedrooms. Yet you can see from this example just how cautious the reform has been. For people who struggling to afford accommodation with two bedrooms, it will seem outrageous that others can going on having babies and getting more and more bedrooms at the expense of taxpayers. And people sometimes get benefit at a level based on expensive housing. Hence the scandalous case recently of one family getting £2,875 a week.

America was far more radical in its reforms. President Clinton agreed to a limit to the total number of years in a lifetime during which people could claim unemployment benefit. America was determined to do something about the benefits culture. Britain under Labour has merely strutted on the stage – posing, pontificating and making precious little difference.

What could be done? One idea – from the Centre for Social Justice - is to subsume housing benefit with many benefits into just a couple of major benefits. The benefits could be withdrawn at a slower rate than now when someone gets work, thus reducing the discouragement to getting a job. The trouble is that, other things being equal, this would cost a lot more.

The truly radical idea would be do something like that but significantly reduce the amount paid and leave it to the recipient entirely what accommodation is rented – if any. That would provide a powerful incentive to lodge with relatives or to go to a different area with lower rents.

But has Britain got the guts to do this sort of thing? I would like to think so but there is every reason to doubt it. The upper middle class elite does not get the seriousness of the problem. The BBC, the readers of Guardian and the Independent believe that their support for generous benefits makes them into generous, good people. Unfortunately it does not. It results instead in the continuance of a welfare dependant lower class with tremendously damaging social effects both to the poor themselves and everyone else.

(This is the unedited version of an article that appeared in the Daily Express today.)

Posted by James Bartholomew • Indexed in Welfare benefits

Comments (7) TrackBack (47)


Comments

Being pedantic but the limitation on US benefits applied to welfare for families with children (TANF) as distinct from the unemployed, who would normally rely on unemployment insurance. TANF is predominantly received by single parent families.

In NZ beneficiaries receive either an accommodation allowance to live in private rental properties or heavily subsided rental of state-owned properties. Having one's 'own home' I believe acts as an incentive to young women who have grown up in a dysfunctional welfare-dependent environment. Hence they frequently follow in their mother's footsteps and dependence is intergenerationally transferred.

Posted by: Lindsay Mitchell at January 5, 2010 08:21 PM

The US has its own version of government subsidized housing: section 8 housing. You should research it sometime.

Posted by: Louise at January 6, 2010 09:37 PM

I believe the workhouse system was correctly abandoned but for the wrong reasons. The real problem with it was not the allegedly awful conditions or the hardness of the work, but the fact that once in it it was virtually impossible to get out. Anyone in a workhouse had no time to look for employment elsewhere, and even if they found some it had to be employment with accommodation provided, as they would have to leave the workhouse on finding employment elsewhere.
I would propose that longterm worklessness be helped by the provision of work- there are any number of ditches need clearing and hedges need cutting, not to mention streets needing cleaning and disabled needing care, so the work is there (even though their labour couldn't be hired out at minimum wage it should be possible to get some money back for their services) the unemployed would therefor have a job- and the same incentive and opportunity as anyone else to find a better one.
The homeless should be treated separately by provision of spartan accommodation (say one room per person or couple and one room between two children, shared bathroom and kitchen facilities). For both schemes opportunity should be provided for the participants to search for better jobs/accommodation.
We could then limit unemployment benefit to a few months- just enough to tide someone over between jobs when they actually have a realistic chance of getting a job.

Posted by: Pat at January 6, 2010 11:27 PM

Hello James,

I wrote about this with Stpehen Greenhalgh from Hammersmith, following the ideas of Stephen King who wrote about it for the IEA some years back.

We proposed calculating "housing benefit" based on the market rent for a suitable property for the claimant, less 30-50% of their take home income (after taxes and/or benefits), with 85% of the difference being paid.

That way the withdrawl rate was reduced and there was an incentive to shop around to get a cheaper deal.

What Labour have done with Local Housing Allowance is set a benefit level based on a formula of local rent and local wages. This has pushed up rents for single person and couple accommodation and because the formula cannot cope with large households, creates situations like the one you refer to.

Why they cannot asses the cost of a home based on looking in the back of the local paper, I do not know!

The link to our paper is here:

http://www.localis.org.uk/images/Localis%20Principles%20for%20Social%20Housing%20Reform%20WEB.pdf

Posted by: John Moss at January 7, 2010 08:10 AM

In Staffordshire we don't have the problem of high levels of benefit paid for mansions. However, what we do have is a high level (as a yield)of benefit paid for properties that are not fit for habitation.

Something I found exraordinary is that housing benenefit can be paid when a property is "rented" from a relation. It does not take much imagination to realise how this could be abused.

Posted by: Jimmy Mac at January 13, 2010 11:14 PM

In theory Housing benefit helps the low paid and unemployed - if employers,landlords and company shareholders paid a decent wage/charge a reasonable rent then there would be no need for housing benefit, or for working tax credit for that matter. It is high time this myth that the benefit system subsidises the poor and unemployed and low paid and workshy is exposed - benefits are there to subsidise the greedy landlords and employers and shareholders (and there are many companies - landlords, IT, employment agencies, service providers and others that make millions providing the most dreadful services, and as for consultants ... ) who will soon scream and shout when/if any govt tries to back track on what the Tories started back in 87.
Still its easy to blame the poor for being poor and congratulate the rich for exploiting them (and each other).

Posted by: Dave at January 30, 2010 09:27 AM

The above article talks misleading nonsense - the JSA is what most unemployed live on - factoring in Housing Benefit,school meals etc to fatten the appearance of the income of benefit claimants is a shoddy ideological trick, typical of those with a condescending, or worse, attitude to the poor.
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The JSA is the only money most unemployed actually see, touch and spend - so that pittance is what they actually try to live on. Housing benefit is really a benefit to, not claimants, but to landlords and low wage employers. There are, I believe, as many low-paid workers claiming HB as there are unemployed.

All very well for a wealthy journalist to spread his vicious disinformation - the truth is, predictably, quite different.

Posted by: dave d at June 26, 2010 07:06 PM

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