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Jun21
Refuse New Deal VSO Programme Provision: NDYP ND25 IAP
Categories: New Deal, YMCA Training; Feedback: 3 Comments
Keywords: a4e, benefits, Dencora House, dwp, iap, jobcentre plus, nd25, ndyp, New Deal, vso, YMCA Training
It has came to our attention that the Department for Work and Pensions’ Executive Agency Jobcentre Plus is trying to push as many people in to the New Deal courses before it ends and become replaced with Flexible New Deal.
This is NOT legit and you CAN get out of it. Read on. View the rest on Flexible New Deal Scandal
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Jun8
Welfare Reform: Criticism
Categories: Welfare Reform; Feedback: 3 Comments
Keywords: benefits, dwp, esa, jcp, jobcentre, jsa, Welfare Reform
I was reading a great article on Welfare Reform (the Welfare Reform Bill 2009) however I greatly disagreed with the points made in the article so I decided to quote sections of it and comment!
The Welfare Reform Bill is to be a tough piece of legislation that will compel people in meeting with their obligations. It comes as no surprise and is long overdue. One of the first targets will be in removing 1 million people off Incapacity Benefit and into work. The entire benefits system is to be streamlined with Income Support being replaced with a leaner ‘out of work benefits’ system. The time has come by which those who “fiddle” the system should take account of what their obligations and duties are.
Removing one million people off “Incapacity Benefit”? Incapacity Benefit doesn’t exist. To the best of my knowledge the Welfare Reform Act 2007 replaced Incapacity Benefit and Income Support with an Employment and Support Allowance in 2008.
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Jun7
£187,500: how much it cost Taxpayers to get a Jobseeker off the dole
Categories: New Deal; Feedback: 8 Comments
Keywords: benefits, gordon brown, jobseeker, New Deal, new labour, taxpayers, tony blair, uk government, unemployment
£187,500
This is the amount it cost Taxpayers to get a single Jobseeker of the dole.
This is the bombshell that stuck the final nail in the coffin of New Deal. A scheme setup by Gordon Brown for New Labour aiming to get less people claiming unemployment benefits and stop living a “life on benefits” lifestyle.
How did we come across this figure? Well… The New Deal scheme costs Taxpayers £75 billion and claimants have dropped by 400,000 people (this figure excludes the surge in new claimants due to the economical crisis) – this equates for each person who is not claiming benefit: £187,500!!
Of course, we shouldn’t presume that these 400,000 people have all obtained sustainable full time jobs, due to benefits being made more difficult to claim in this period. We also can’t presume or expect that these 400,000 less claims were a result from the New Deal courses.
What I can quite confidently state that with £75 Billion instead of the 13 week New Deal courses, the Government could have employed 9 times more people (assuming that those 400,000 people got full time jobs) – or 3.6 million people to stick it as a figure – full time on an annual salary of £20,000 for one year.
Alternatively, they could have employed over 360,000 people on a £20,000 annual salary for 10 years.