Did the welfare bill really get out of control under Labour?

The idea that social security spending got out of control under Labour isn’t really backed up by Department of Work and Pensions evidence.

Gareth Millward is a History PhD student at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

In the light of the recent debate about social security spending, Gareth Millward has taken a look at a common myth: Did social security spending spiral out of control under the last Labour government?

The idea that social security spending got out of control under Labour isn’t really backed up by Department of Work and Pensions evidence.

As the following charts show, overall government expenditure rose consistently both in cash terms and as a percentage of Britain’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) during the years of the ‘classic welfare state’.

Even after the crisis of the mid-1970s, it continued to eat up more and more of Britain’s GDP. Margaret Thatcher could only buck the trend late in her premiership with unemployment dropping and the economy growing.

The recession in the early 1990s saw expenditure rocket again, before levelling off later in the decade. Since then we have spent more on social security (in cash terms), but at a much gentler rate of increase than at any point since the 1960s. Indeed, as the economy grew during the boom of the early 2000s, expenditure as a percentage of GDP actually fell.

Welfare 1978 to 2012

The next increase, unsurprisingly, coincided with a new recession. If Labour wasted money on social security because they spent more in 2010 than in 1997 (in cash terms), what can we say about the Conservatives? Margaret Thatcher (first term, 1979-83) and John Major (1990-97) increased social security expenditure more rapidly than any other prime ministers in history.

By now there should be a key theme emerging – expenditure as a percentage of GDP increases significantly during recessions. We see ‘bulges’ in the early eighties, early nineties and late noughties. The key reasons? Higher unemployment and less growth to absorb the cost of those benefits.

Indeed, it is quite clear why New Labour was able to keep expenditure relatively flat over the early years of the millennium. Overall expenditure on key out-of-work benefits was kept under control in a time of relatively high employment.

Yes, the true scope of unemployment has been masked since the mid-1980s by disability pensions, but the fact remains that social security costs were kept steady despite a growing pensions bill.

The question of whether this is a ‘good thing’ remains in the eye of the beholder. Much like Conservative governments in the 1950s and 1970s maintained the new benefits created by Labour (even if they didn’t like the fact that they were created at all), New Labour continued the policies of its neo-liberal predecessors.

Thus, reforms made by the Thatcher and Major governments to restrict access to contributory Unemployment Benefit and Invalidity Benefit were tolerated and used as tools to keep spending down.

The worry must be, therefore, that the recent brutal cuts to Employment and Support Allowance (itself a New Labour invention) will be maintained by any post-2015 Labour government despite their clear negative impact on disabled people.

No doubt, once the economy recovers, social security expenditure will remain relatively flat. But that does not mean the welfare state will be adequately providing a safety net for those who suffer this misfortune of ill health and unemployment.

Welfare 1978 to 2012 2

30 Responses to “Did the welfare bill really get out of control under Labour?”

  1. Gareth Millward

    You can be as suspicious as you like. This is the total as quoted by the DWP in the statistics (the link is right at the top of the article).

    The Excel file includes tax credits, housing benefit, and pensions credits. Feel free to use the data yourself and come up with a new graph.

  2. Gareth Millward

    Pensions are included in the top graph. In the second, I was showing how out of work benefits contributed to the spikes in expenditure.

  3. LB

    No they aren’t.

    What is included is the pension outflows.

    You have ignored the increase in the pensions debts.

    http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/dcp171766_263808.pdf

    This is a paper from the ONS.

    Please go and read it.

    Take the debts in 2010. Take the debts in 2005. Take the difference and divide by 5

    That’s the annual increase in the debts.

    Why are you ignoring the increase in debts?

    That’s a cost of the pensions.

    For example lets say I set up a new state pension system for 20 year olds. They pay in 20% of their income. The state works it this way, so I do the same.

    I take that 20% – a few billion. It’s a surplus, so I spend the cash. Lots of bonuses, fast cars, loose women, … you get the idea. No need to report anything about paying the pensions in 45 years, we must be healthy, we’ve a surplus, and surpluses are good and can be spent on other things.

    Repeat for 45 years. Brilliant isn’t it. Lots of cash. ….

    Year 45 – I’,m off to the Bahamas, or any place without an extradition warrant.

    So why haven’t you included the debts in the pension costs? See the example above, try reading the ONS paper, its short.

  4. Gareth Millward

    I’m tired of having this “debate” with you. I’m not engaging any further with a troll.

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