IDS’s gradual criminalisation of poverty

The government is intent on extending benefit sanctions by stealth

 

Recipients of welfare compensation are having their benefits stopped or reduced because of sanctions being doled out by Iain Duncan Smith’s Department of Work and Pensions (DWP).

The extent to which a sanctions culture has been engrained in our social security system has yet to fully emerge.

That’s why I have been working with Baroness Jenny Jones to table a series of Parliamentary questions to expose the mainstreaming of sanctions, including the extension of sanctions to people in work.

The DWP claims that sanctions are only used as a last resort and in a small minority of cases. They have even put a number on it, claiming that 94 per cent of Jobseeker’s aren’t sanctioned.

But Iain Duncan Smith’s department has form when it comes to fiddling the figures. At the end of 2014, 900,000 people claimed Jobseeker’s Allowance but over 600,000 Jobseeker sanctions were issued. It is plainly obvious that Iain Duncan Smith’s department is being far from transparent.

The government is stubbornly refusing to publish an annual sanction rate. The data, they claim, would be prohibitively expensive.

This is nonsense, and the government must come clean. By taking the number of jobseekers at the beginning of a year, adding new claimants, and taking away those who find work, the true sanction rate is likely to be around 17-18 per cent. That’s around one in six jobseekers.

It is little wonder the government doesn’t want to do the maths – particularly given the growing awareness of the damage that sanctions do.

Sanctions kick people when they are down. They drive up the need for foodbanks. They target the most disadvantaged, hurting tens of thousands of children. They are unfair, punitive and in some cases lethal.

By the DWP’s own admission sanctions damage the claimant. But their rulebook merely states that someone with a health condition should not deteriorate under sanctions more than that of a healthy adult.

We know from international studies that benefit sanctions don’t help people find work. Iain Duncan Smith knew this before he began this push. But he also knew that he could proceed with next to no opposition as it was New Labour that first introduced them.

The government is intent on extending sanctions by stealth. Meanwhile, it continues to perpetuate the myth that they only apply to a few ‘undeserving’ cases.

This deception is part of the Tory attempts to rebrand poverty, rather than tackle it. The government continues to prevent the release of figures for the suicides of benefit claimants, and those who die shortly after being certified ‘fit for work’.

The Tory manifesto proposed sanctioning those who don’t accept prescribed medical treatments and therapies. This is now moving forward for drug users and the obese and mental health claimants are next in line.

Iain Duncan Smith has led the charge to criminalise poverty. But even convicted criminals serving time in prison are guaranteed food to eat.

He wrongly believes that people need to be bullied and harassed into work, all the while sitting as part of a government that has fostered an explosion of insecure, low paid jobs.

He’s even going so far as to mainstream the sanctions culture by extending it to people receiving in work tax credits. Last year, Iain Duncan Smith told the Work and Pensions Select Committee that trials were being carried out in the North-West on removing benefits from part-time workers who refuse to take on extra hours.

The mainstreaming of benefit sanctions and their extension to the working-poor is a grotesque interpretation of how social security should work. It treats those who need help as presumed guilty, not innocent. It is another example of the Tories ‘Hunger Games’ politics, seeking to divide the nation at every turn.

Jonathan Bartley is the Green Party’s work and pensions spokesperson. Follow him on Twitter

57 Responses to “IDS’s gradual criminalisation of poverty”

  1. Matt M

    “We know from international studies that benefit sanctions don’t help people find work”. Citation needed.

  2. Harry Alffa

    I keep saying it, but no one is listening: bailoutswindle.com. Have a read FFS.

  3. JoeDM

    People who can work should work.

    A life on welfare must not be a lifestyle choice.

  4. Dark_Heart_of_Toryland

    People who work should be guarunteed a living wage and decent conditions. Those who can’t get work should be treated humanely and decently.

    Welfare is not a lifestyle choice, any more than working poverty. You really shouldn’t swallow government propaganda whole.

  5. Dark_Heart_of_Toryland

    If right-wingers are so concerned about people, why, then, do they support harsh and vindictive measures which do not work, and which cause misery and hardship? You surely cannot really belive that it does people good to starve them, and that people will only respond to being punished? If you do genuinely believe this, then you must have a very poor opinion of your fellow human beings.

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