Social Security Policy.

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Social Security Policy

New Labour promised to halve child poverty by 2010 and to eradicate it by 2020, (Walker, 1999).  Social security is not merely about poverty relief, as the relief of poverty requires more than just social security reform, it is important to address the position of social security policy at present to see whether Labour can live up to this rather ambitious target it has set.

        The term ‘Social Security’ is used to refer to the range of policies which aim to transfer cash resources between individuals and families.   It is concerned with policies which govern the redistribution of resources within society.

        After coming to power in 1997 the Labour government reviewed the key principles of social security policy.  They developed the ‘Welfare to Work’ strategy, as they want people of working age to look for employment within the labour market and avoid dependence on the state.

        The maintenance of a high and stable level of employment was one of the fundamental assumptions of the Beveridge report, and an objective to which all governments were positively committed after 1944 (Lowe, 1993).

        Hills (1997) argues that since Beveridge, the objectives of social security have never been set out in a way allowing measurement of whether benefit levels are adequate to meet their aims.

        The original aim of the National Insurance system as introduced following the recommendations of the Beveridge report in 1948 was to set up a system of subsistence level flat-rate social insurance benefits which were intended to cover all the main causes of inability to earn, such as old age, sickness, unemployment, widowhood and orphanhood.  It also included virtually the whole body of the populations, whether employed, self- employed or non- employed, as far as possible in the same terms (Sleeman, 1979).

        Changes in the welfare system have been needed for a variety of reasons, society has changed, and policies need to change to keep in tune with this, these changes include changing families, working women, an ageing society and rising expectations (Giddens, 1998; Hills, 1997).

        In the UK, the earliest form of social security was the Poor Law which was based around discretionary payments related to individuals’ assessment of need, and this continued to play a part in the delivery of many means- tested benefits until the last two decades of the twentieth century (Alcock, 2003).  The Elizabethan Poor Law (1598) distinguished between the deserving and undeserving, this is something which is still reflected in Social Security policy; Hewitt and Powell (2002) point out how the use of contracts can be taken back to the deserving and undeserving poor, only now the terms being used are responsible and irresponsible; and this is reflected in the ‘Security for those who cannot’ (DSS 1998)- which means no security for those who can but do not. Another similarity between the poor law and the modern welfare state is that Parishes excluded the traveling poor from its boundaries; this is still evident today with the treatment of travelers and the single homeless.  This argument is supported by Hills and Gardiner (1997).        

        Within Social Security, Employment policy occupies a crucial position in the post- war reconstruction, and without which the welfare state could not exist.  Full employment would both finance the development of the welfare state, and government welfare policy would help to maintain economic growth.

        Barr (1993) has outlined three social aims of state intervention in income distribution; the relief of poverty in order to protect a minimum income standard was the first.  The second is the protection of accustomed living standards to ensure that none has to face an unexpected and unacceptably large drop in their standard of living and the third is, smoothing out income over the life cycle.  However, as pointed out by Glennerster and Hills these three interact, the balance between them and the responsibility of the state can differ over time and between countries.  

        The aims of Social Security policy are not merely to be measured in income terms.  Social and political participation may be seen as important civic virtues by a broad spectrum of political opinion.  Social Security maintains a standard of living that supports inclusiveness (Townsend 1979), the consequences of failure in this respect is ‘social exclusion’.

        The miseries of unemployment in a work- ethic society are well- documented by Sinfield, (1981).  To these are added the harassment and insecurity of dependence on means tested welfare (Bradshaw and Deacon,1983) and the despair of living at a standard of living which steadily falls behind that of the working class in work.  (Taylor- Gooby, 1985).  Glennerster (1999) has criticized the critics, arguing that paid work brings dignity and respect.

        Social welfare imposes controls on society, social security regulations distinguish those who do and do not deserve support.  As pointed out by Taylor- Gooby (1985) regulations which ensure that a household head is usually responsible for the living standards of family members defined as dependents encourage a certain household pattern.

        Social Security is traditionally divided into a contributory and a non- contributory sector, the former covers benefits such as sickness benefits, unemployment benefits, retirement pension, widows’ benefit- those regarded as the important benefits. In the latter most benefits are allocated to those who can prove that they do through a mean test.  

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        Eligibility for social security has two elements, the first being the formal rules and regulations governing provision of benefits and secondly the perceptions of eligibility held by claimants and potential claimants.  The contributory principle, whereby National Insurance benefits are linked to earnings established under rules of eligibility which disproportionately excludes those in intermittent or low paid work, those with a higher risk of unemployment as well as recent migrants.  The establishment of such policy on the basis of a White, Male norm thereby formally excluded many of those in minority ethnic group from social citizenship rights to such benefits (Amin ...

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