NZCPR Weekly: Lifting Children Out of Dependency
NZCPR Weekly
Lifting Children Out of Dependency
This week, NZCPR Weekly
examines how well New Zealand's welfare system lifts sole
mothers and their children out of dependency,
(printer-friendly view The release of
the National Party's welfare policy has brought a
predictable clamour from the defenders of the present
welfare system. Such was the protest that one could be
mistaken for thinking National was proposing to abolish
welfare entirely! Hardly. National is in fact merely
proposing that single parents on the domestic purposes
benefit undertake 15 hours of employment, training or
job-search activities, once their youngest child is aged
six.[1] This is hardly earth-shattering or radical thinking.
It is of course, a sensible change and long overdue. At
present there are 96,000 sole parents on the domestic
purposes benefit, 36,000 of whom have children aged six or
more. Although this is a very small step towards real
reform it is at least a step in the right direction and
marks a fundamental shift from what we have had for the last
nine years. Ensuring a social safety net is in place is a
key responsibility of government. New Zealand's social
welfare system was designed to ensure that those who are
incapacitated and genuinely unable to support themselves are
provided with long-term security. But for those who are
capable of earning their own living, welfare support should
be temporary and designed to give them a hand up to work and
independence.
These were the principles upon which our
welfare system was based. It was recognised by the
architects of the system that long-term reliance on benefits
for people who are able-bodied is very damaging, especially
when children are involved. The problem is that if
benefits are readily accessible and work requirements are
weak, it is all too easy for welfare to become a trap, and a
rort. With only the unemployment benefit being subjected to
a work test, the domestic purposes benefit - as well as the
sickness and invalid benefits - have locked many people in
welfare dependency who are quite capable of working for a
living. Ministry of Social Development figures reveal that
in the twelve months to the end of June, although New
Zealand faced a critical shortage of workers, the number of
sole parents on the domestic purposes benefit fell by only
27. This is an astonishing indictment of a welfare system
that is unable to make people independent of state support
and highlights a major problem that we face. Not only do we
have proportionately more sole parents on benefits than most
countries in the developed world, but very large numbers
remain on welfare for extended periods: almost 70,000 have
been on the domestic purposes benefit for over a year with
34,000 over 4 years, and 11,000 over 10 years.[2] In the
recently published report "A Fair Go for All Children", the
Children's Commissioner identified some 170,000 children who
live in single parent poverty.[3] The report finds that work
is the key to reducing child poverty: "Supporting parents in
work and ensuring they gain financially from their
employment is critical to reducing child poverty". For
years the OECD, which monitors welfare programmes in member
countries, has raised concerns over New Zealand's high rate
of single parent welfare dependency - the second highest in
the OECD. They have found categorically that sole parent
welfare dependency is the prime cause of child poverty, with
the risk of children growing up in poverty being at least
three times higher in jobless sole parent families than in
families where someone works for a living. The OECD
believes that New Zealand's reliance on the Domestic
Purposes Benefit is excessive because the incentives for
mothers to move back to work are not strong enough. As a
result, they have found that we spend far more than most
OECD countries on income support for sole parents.[4] An
examination of those OECD countries that have far lower
rates of child poverty and single-parent unemployment than
New Zealand highlights the key difference between us. None
of them have a separate benefit for sole parents. Denmark,
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Portugal and Austria, to name
but a few, have welfare systems that provide sole parents
with a range of additional supports - largely through family
or child payments - but there is no special stand-alone
benefit.[5] In those countries there is a strong recognition
that the only way for sole parents and their children to
avoid the poverty trap is through the workforce. In
comparison, countries like Australia and the UK, which have
stand-alone single parent benefits similar to our domestic
purposes benefit, also struggle with high rates of child
poverty and sole parent dependency. It is therefore clear
that the problems we face in New Zealand have been caused by
the domestic purposes benefit having been established as a
stand-alone benefit by the labour Government in the
seventies. If we had stayed with the old system of
supporting single parents through other benefits, New
Zealand's rates of child and single parent poverty would be
at the low end of the OECD rankings. During the
nineties, when the United States was facing similar problems
of increasing child poverty and sole parent dependency,
moves were made to find a better system. One of those at the
forefront of change was Tommy Thompson, the Governor of the
State of Wisconsin. Wisconsin, a farming state of 4 million
people had more generous welfare benefits than many other
states and as a result had one of the country's highest
rates of sole parent welfare with more than 100,000 mothers
on a benefit. The reforms introduced by Governor Thompson
were so successful that not only did he reduce sole parent
dependency in Wisconsin by a whopping 96 percent, but his
programmes formed the basis of President Clinton's 1996
sweeping social welfare reforms which aimed to "abolish
welfare as we know it". Tommy Thompson, the former
Governor of Wisconsin and President Bush's former Secretary
for Health and Human Services, is this week's NZCPR Guest
Commentator. He explains how he went about changing the
system: "When I was Governor of Wisconsin I heard
frequently from parents on welfare - especially mothers -
about how much they wanted to leave welfare behind and build
a better life for themselves and their children. These
conversations led to a number of very important lessons.
Firstly, the government has an absolutely crucial role to
play in helping those who can't provide for themselves.
However, we have to be smart about how we help them. We have
leant that just giving money without any expectations
creates a cycle of dependency that leaves many families
mired in poverty and abuse, unable to take control of their
lives. Secondly, the government's support must be focused on
helping people find and succeed at work. This means not
just helping them to find good jobs but also requiring them
to take the jobs and to succeed in them." To read the full
article, click the sidebar link>>> While opponents
predicted that the changes would bring disaster, the
opposite turned out to be the case. By supporting sole
parents in four key ways - through child care,
transportation, jobs skill training and a requirement to
work - more and more welfare families left dependency to
enter the workforce and the world of self-sufficiency.
Wisconsin's successes were adapted by states across the
US with the same positive results. Eventually, the
realisation that the new system was working in unprecedented
ways to help families escape the welfare trap, led to a
complete overhaul of the system of support for sole parents
by Congress, replacing Aid for Families with Dependent
Children (AFDC) - the equivalent of our domestic purposes
benefit - with a programme of assistance conditional upon
work, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF). As
the Economist reported in an article "From welfare to
workfare" in 2006, after peaking in 1994 America's welfare
caseload fell by 60 percent over the next decade, from 5
million to 2 million families. Welfare mothers found work
with the biggest increase among those who had never been
married. Their employment rate leapt from 44 percent in 1993
to 66 percent in 2000 and the poverty rate, instead of
rising sharply, dropped from 15.1 percent to 11.3 percent.
States responded to the new federal welfare targets and
the greater flexibility provided by the new programme by
overhauling their welfare offices, in some cases turning
over the whole process to private firms. Many offices
stressed work from the moment people stepped through the
front door, sometimes signing them up for job-training
sessions as soon as they applied for welfare. Some states
required applicants to try job searches before they could be
eligible for cash benefits, shifting much of the money they
were doling out as cash benefits, into programmes that
supported work - child care, health care, transport
subsidies and so on. Margie Davis of Project Match, a
non-profit agency that offered job-search and other services
in Chicago, explained how many women followed a well
established path - a job, a better job, then a career:
"After leaving welfare for a job at the checkout till, they
got enough training and education, often with government
help, to become nurses, teachers or social workers. Those
jobs not only boosted their pay, but also provided better
health insurance and schedules flexible enough to let them
care for their children more easily. As a result, the
quality of some women's lives has improved dramatically. As
those lives evolve, I also get to go to a lot of
weddings".[6] National has signaled that it is time that
New Zealand tackled the well-documented problems faced by
sole parents and children living in entrenched welfare
dependency and for that it should be commended. It is an
area long-neglected by Labour whose policies have increased
social dependence not reduced it. But the question
remains as to whether tinkering with the system will ever be
enough. Maybe it is time to bite the bullet and replace New
Zealand's stand alone sole parent welfare benefit - the
domestic purposes benefit - with a system based on the
successful models overseas that have prevented welfare
dependency and the poverty trap becoming the significant
problem that it is for sole parents and their children in
New Zealanders today. A grateful thanks to those who have
supported the work of the NZCPR - I cannot continue without
the backing of readers. If you would like to help, please
click here FOOTNOTES: All articles can be found on the NZCPR
RESEARCH PAGE - click here
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NZCPR Commentary WELFARE REFORM
Tommy Thompson The most important thing we did was to
change the message that we sent. Instead of saying "You are
not able, we must take care of you forever", we said "We
believe in you - we believe you share the same values, hopes
and dreams that all of us have and we believe that you are
able to support yourself. We believe that no matter what
troubles you have, what difficulties you face, you can
overcome those problems and difficulties and you can
succeed. We as the government are here to help - as your
partner." ENDS