
Originally Posted by
Eric Cartman
Firstly, I appreciate you trying to focus on policy.
Secondly, they are pumping money into skills/opportunity training to help get people who can work, that's literally part of the welfare bill. It's also worth noting that because of the unique situation Britain are in (rising economic inactivity amongst working age people) these cuts still result in an increasing welfare bill, just less than it would have been.
They are also ending reassessments for people who have chronic conditions and will never be able to work.
The bottom line for me (as someone who works with SEND data) is that the average person has no idea what is coming down the road in terms of welfare spending, summed up by:
'The number of people receiving one of the main types of health and disability benefit, Personal Independence Payments (PIP), has also risen rapidly and is becoming unsustainable.
Since the pandemic, the number of working-age people receiving PIP has more than doubled from 15,300 to 35,100 a month. The number of young people (16-24) receiving PIP per month has also skyrocketed from 2,967 to 7,857 a month. Over the next five years, if no action is taken, the number of working age people claiming PIP is expected to increase from 2 million in 2021 to 4.3 million'
And herein lies the uncomfortable truth for anybody of a left leaning perspective, you can't be ideologically attached to a point of view just because it hurts to agree with the other side occasionally and in specific circumstances.
Migration is good, net migration of a million isn't
A proper robust safety net is good, a high percentage of working age adults being on some kind of disability benefit isn't.
That doesn't mean you hate migrants or 'scroungers', it doesn't mean you have been 'sucked in', it means you are being objective and using the information available to you.
What level of net migration would be make things difficult for the country to improve services/outcomes for people who already live here? Number or % of current population.