DWP — The Resolution Foundation is the latest to jump on the disabled young people-bashing bandwagon. On Tuesday 24 March, the think tank posted a video on its X account laying into so-called NEETs (young people not in education, employment, or training).
Naturally, the fact that disabled young people are not in jobs had nothing to do with exploitative employers or the dire lack of accessible jobs. Or you know, there’s evidently no significance to the simple fact that ‘inactive’ claimants on the health element of Universal Credit have gone through a rigorous assessment and the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has quite literally found them too sick to work.
Nope, the oh-so generous benefits system is to blame for ‘incentivising’ them not to enter employment. That’s according to the actually generously paid non-disabled talking heads at the Resolution Foundation. Now where have we heard that before?
The ostensible Labour government mouthpiece was spouting this bile all as the DWP is just under two weeks away from slashing Universal Credit’s health element in fucking half for new claimants.
Of course, disabled people haven’t soon forgotten that it was the Resolution Foundation that was behind the callous idea in the first place.
Resolution Foundation: Universal Credit ‘incentivising’ young people not to work
The video in question was a conversation between its research director Lindsay Judge and its principal economist Nye Cominetti:
Laying it on thick with the lazy scrounger insinuation from the get-go, Cominetti asked Judge:
To what extent do we think, you know, the incentives, structures and so on in the benefits system are to blame for our NEET rates?
Judge started by at least acknowledging the pitiful rates of Universal Credit. But at the same time, she couldn’t help but lean into the myth that benefits ‘incentivise’ people to stay out of work:
I think it’s really clear that for young people who’re unemployed who get a lower standard allowance Universal Credit rate, the incentives to be on Universal Credit are pretty dismal. So anybody who thinks that they’re languishing on kind of lavish benefits doesn’t know anything about the standard allowance.
Judge almost gets it, almost. She seemed to attempt to dispel the nonsense idea people are “languishing” on benefits. However, she then basically went on to imply disabled people claiming the health element are doing just that:
I think it’s a bit different for young people who are in the inactive category and who are on Universal Credit health element. Because that’s a significant amount more money than the UC standard allowance. And not only do they get more money if they’re in that group, but they also aren’t subject to conditionalities, so they’re not sanctioned…So I think there are financial reasons why the benefits system is pushing young people perhaps to be in that inactive category.
DWP Universal Credit cuts: brainchild of the Resolution Foundation
Judge’s spiel wasn’t all that surprising. The Canary previously uncovered that the Resolution Foundation pushed the idea that the DWP should slash the health element. It proposed that the government could use this to cover increases to the standard allowance.
So of course, now it has to save face with this preposterous narrative. And right now, maligning young benefit claimants is all the right-wing rag, privileged politician rage.
Anyone actually trying to survive on woefully inadequate state support will know it’s horrendous. The billionaire-owned press is constantly demonising disabled claimants. Vilifying rhetoric that recipients are faking their conditions is rife at Westminster.
When the bloody chancellor of the exchequer is going around saying young people on benefits are “stain on this country” and the DWP boss calling the growing number of young disabled people not in work or education a “disease”, how are young disabled claimants meant to feel like anything other than a burden?
But that’s how this Labour government wants it. Because then, it can shunt them into low-paying apprenticeships with its arms manufacturer mates.
Doing the DWP’s dirty work for it
So the Resolution Foundation is doing the government’s dirty work designing and manufacturing consent for cuts for it. Of course, it’s the kind of shameless scapegoating you might expect from the think tank formerly headed by current DWP ghoul Torsten Bell-end.
The very same day it posted its bullshit video, an Independent article was circulating on X. Southampton City Council turned down a young disabled man for a paid bin worker job. He’d been doing the job for nine month – free. Slave-Labour-Soton CC is a ‘disability confident’ employer by the way – for the little that’s clearly worth.
Tell us again how the government’s flashy solution to pay employers to hire young disabled claimants is going to help. So far, it hasn’t provided any evidence its suite of new corporate bungs is going to lead to employers taking on staff they wouldn’t have already.
Rich policy wonks advising on youth unemployment
Judge and Cominetti are likely among the 12/30 Resolution Foundation employees raking in over £60k. And even if they’re not, the remaining 18 employees took home over £1m between them anyway. So it’s all but certain they have a tidy salary.
Thanks to the Resolution Foundation’s bright idea, a single disabled young person under the age of 25 will now get a whopping… £6,670 a year in Universal Credit (£4,063 standard allowance, £2,607 health element). To put that in context, that’s little over a quarter of a full-time annual salary on minimum wage. The DWP has assessed these disabled people as too ill to work.
So, social security like Universal Credit, disability benefits, if they’ve undergone the gruelling application for them, and sometimes housing benefits, will likely be their sole income.
The point being, these paltry benefits aren’t even enough for young disabled people to live on. If they’re ‘languishing’ in anything, it’s state-sanctioned and gratuitously-celebrated destitution. Perhaps these well-paid policy wonks far-removed from the realities of this shamble of a welfare system would like to answer where the fucking incentive is in that?
Featured image via the Canary
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