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Dublin: 9 °C Wednesday 22 May, 2013

Column: The social welfare bill – ‘I wonder what this button does?’

Independent TD Stephen Donnelly laments “a series of policy mistakes” embedded into our legislation tonight as the Social Welfare Bill is signed into law.

Stephen Donnelly

THE PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION is signing the Social Welfare and Pensions Bill tonight, and with it embeds a series of policy mistakes into our law.

Those mistakes matter – getting welfare wrong can condemn parents to poverty traps, take valuable skills out of the labour market and reinforce intergenerational poverty.

And the way those mistakes were made demonstrated a worrying contempt for democracy.

First, the mistakes. This Bill is part of a policy approach being pursued by the Fine Gael / Labour Government in which those least able to bear the burden of the economic crisis are being asked to bear most, and those most able are being asked to bear almost none of it. This is not rhetoric – a few weeks ago the Central Statistics Office published a report showing that for 2010, the poorest tenth of the population lost 26 per cent of their disposable income, while the richest tenth saw an 8 per cent increase. Ninety per cent of households saw their incomes fall: and the poorer the household, the bigger the fall.

Since then, this Government has brought in a budget that the ESRI described as regressive, in that it took proportionately more off poorer people than wealthier people.

One of the most obvious examples of this regressive approach is the extraordinary attack on lone parents started in the budget, and now continued in this new Bill.

At a community centre in Fassaroe in Bray, I asked what the precise impact of the budgetary package would be on the lone parents they work with. For a single parent with four children, the cuts added up to nearly €4,600.

In contrast, a single high-earner with no children is being hit for precisely €100 – the household charge. So this Government is taking 46 times more from the single parent raising four children than from the high earner raising none. As a percentage of their relative incomes it’s probably closer to 100 times.

This week, it got much, much worse. Under the Bill, lone parents will lose something called the One Parent Family Payment when their child turns 8, rather than 15. At this point, they are expected to use childcare and seek work. There are two problems with this: What childcare? What work?

There are 26 unemployed people for each job vacancy in Ireland, compared to an EU average ratio of seven, according to Eurostat.

We also have some of the most expensive childcare on earth, meaning that for many lone parents, even if they could find a job, their net wage wouldn’t even cover the costs (and childcare is not tax deductible). This is a classic poverty trap, penalising the parent and, of course, the children.

Joan Burton gave a commitment that this measure would not be implemented until she had received “a credible and bankable commitment” that a “Scandinavian” quality childcare system would be set up. The making of such a commitment just illustrates how bankrupt our political system has become.

Many things could happen after this Bill becomes law to prevent such a system being set up, no matter what Joan Burton’s intentions may be. Bringing in law on the basis of a personal commitment not to implement it until certain conditions are met (conditions which are not included in the legislation itself) is just not good enough.

So why are these mistakes being made? Partly because of how this Bill was rushed through the Dáil. Not a single Opposition amendment was accepted. It was guillotined at all stages. (This is when the Government forces the end of debate on legislation, despite there being more TDs who want to speak on it or further amendments to debate.) This is despite the Programme for Government commitment that they “will tackle the huge over-use of guillotines to ram through non-emergency legislation.” This Government has wielded the guillotine faster than the French Revolution, chopping debate on over 2/3rds of all Bills to date. Plus ça change…

The Social Welfare Bill wasn’t ready in time, so the Government published it, and then introduced amendments at committee stage (which comes after the main debate in the Dáil). I asked Joan Burton how she had ensured that the new measures would receive adequate Oireachtas scrutiny. Her answer was that “briefings” had been given to the Opposition. This really goes to the heart of the dysfunction in our politics: this Government appears to believe that the Dáil is merely there to be “briefed”, not to hold them to account (contrary to what it says in our Constitution): ‘We will brief you, but we will not listen to you.’

The only chance the Dáil did get to scrutinise the amendments was at committee stage – during which a guillotine was called. When that happened, all the remaining Government amendments were declared to have been passed, without any debate at all. All remaining Opposition amendments were automatically rejected.

With Dáil oversight neutralised, did the Department officials at least do their homework? There was no regulatory impact analysis on this bill, no gender impact analysis, no poverty impact analysis. In other words, nobody knows how many people are going to be pushed into poverty by these changes; nobody knows how the burden is being distributed between men and women. These are basic policy requirements and safeguards in any modern democracy.

These kinds of analyses are meant to move us beyond the ‘I wonder what this button does’ school of decision making. They should be brought to the Oireachtas so that proposed legislation can be properly scrutinised. The Oireachtas should then be given adequate time to debate the legislation, with the Government open to the outside chance that it may have got a few things wrong.

Failure on all of these counts means that the Social Welfare and Pensions Bill was bad for democracy, as well as being bad for those it targets.

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Comments (59 Comments)

  • I think a lot of people are missing the point. what d fu@# is up with Joan’s hair in that picture?

    Reply
  • @conor
    I think you find that a woman living with her fella claiming lone parent is in fact a couple defrauding the state not a lone parent. She should be reported!
    I think this bill would be great if we had better child care facilities. 690 a month for 3 days a week for a 2yr old and I’m not even in Dublin. How could you financially cope paying for rent/mortgage and crèche especially if you have more then 1 Kid. Most mother would love to work even part time but not if it makes you worse off

    Reply
  • @ Conor… your response is typical… there is a lot of diversity in family structures in Ireland today… people become single parents through separation and divorce and it is not “a lifestyle choice” for many… these are the people who will be hit the worst…the genuine single parents… women will be forced to remain in abusive relationships if their children are over 7 years of age because the alternative will be to leave and live in abject poverty… whilst I agree there are some who do abuse the social welfare system… you cannot tar all single parents with the same brush… in effect those who do abuse it will just go on and keep having more children to keep their payments whilst those who have a genuine need will be penalised once their children are aged 7 years or over… in my opinion this Bill is unconstitutional under section 41.2.2 of the Constitution which states that “Mothers shall not be obliged by economic necessity to engage in labour to the neglect of their duties in the home”. Being a single parent is tough enough without the added pressure of having to work long hours for low pay and have no down time in the evening because you are the only person to look after your children… walk a day in the shoes of a single parent before you judge them

    Reply
  • Normally I would say you get what you deserve. If you elect a right wing government then expect right wing policies. I think a lot of us were hoodwinked by Labour in the election. This labour party is about as far from the left as you can get. An absolute disgrace. As the song goes, you might trick me once but I wont let you trick me twice.

    Reply
    • Your running out of alternatives I’m afraid, SF anybody?

      Reply
    • ive seen plenty lone parents in my area with 2 or 3 kids, house for 30 bucks a week and their partner living with them on the Qt. No pity for them. This is handout country, the working individual getting fleeced at every turn then to pay for it all.

      Reply
    • Agreed.
      However, you also have to allow for the fact that many people who vote don’t really know (or care) very much about politics. I know some who voted FG, but didn’t understand how right wing they are. Hopefully that will change.
      Some people, encouraged by the media, thought they had voted for a change. A change of faces – yes. A change of policy – no.

      Reply
    • @conor do you know of their circumstances personally ?? or are you just guessing and jumping on the bandwagon !!!
      And if you do know why haven’t you done something about it ? ie report it …….

      Reply
    • @onthedole. No bandwagon just what i see going on, most people know someone at it. Its not my job to report anyone, if the state wanted to catch them a bit of surveilence in the estates concerned would nab a share of them. I cant see that happening anytime soon though, the PC brigade would be out saying it infringed on their rights if they did!

      Reply
    • Hi Conor, remember snitches get stitches:-) Only kidding, seriously though, I agree that its not up to individuals to report anyone. I really don’t think that the majority of single parents are scam artists, no doubt some are but it really is a fault in the system that people can get away with that sort of thing not a whole segment of society.

      Reply
    • @ Conor. Not your job to report them? If your working are you not paying for them? Is this not part of the problem ah sure that’s someone else job? Report them and maybe save the tax payer a bit of money which can be redirected to maybe health or some equally useful.

      Reply
    • @Conor, can I please make a distinction for you. If a person is living with someone then they are a couple. If that couple decides to defraud the state by claiming Lone Parents, it is a COUPLE that is defrauding the state, not genuine Lone Parents. I’m a Lone Parent with 3 kids, I work and go to college and hate that I am seen to be defrauding the state just because I am a Lone Parent. When are people going to realise it’s not Lone Parents, it’s COUPLES that are fleecing us. Just needing to get that idea across :)

      Reply
    • As for those who say the ‘lone parent’ scam is a myth. I can assure you it’s not. Just ask my next door neighbours.

      Reply
  • Remember folks that a lone parent gets the princely sum of €19.80 per child per week on top of their own payment which is the same as the dole.

    Try feeding and clothing a child on less than €20 a week!! Then try putting that child through school and all the extra expense our FREE education system brings

    If your child is sick a bottle of calpol costs about €5.

    The best way to stick it to this government is to hit them where it hurts and a no vote in the upcoming referendum will do just that!!

    Reply
  • Joan looks desperate, God love her, it must be so hard trying to work out how much she can take off lone parents, children and pensioners, imagine the hours she spends sitting there with her calculator, oh no i forgot she has how many advisers to help her? on what salary, and claiming an average of €3.500 a month on expenses plus all her other allowances, while a lone parent like myself is expected to live on €220 a week, since the fuel allowance was cut six weeks early. I am not unemployed by choice, or parenting alone by choice either, i don’t have anyone except my 3 children living with me in private rented accommodation, for which i pay €400 a month, remainder of €750 is covered by health board, big deal! I worked since i was 14 years of age and would still be working if i had not lost my jobs due to “cuts in funding”. I refuse to feel guilty for the mess this country is in, it is not the fault of any of the people in this country, yet we are being screwed in order to keep bondholders happy

    Reply
  • Pani 01/05/12 #

    Stephen, why is the president signing it then if it’s regressive? He was deemed to be an intellectual at election time. Has that changed or has he no power in this? Those questions may be outside of the merits of the act though.

    Reply
  • That picture of Joan looks like a mugshot. Rather fitting.

    Reply
  • Labour the champions of the downtrodden bankers .

    Reply
  • Oh what was I thinking ,its happen already but the buzz word for it is Intership

    Reply
  • Would disagree with a lot of Stephen’s politics but you really have to say, he’s bloody spot on here. If Stephen, as a self confessed right-winger (in the economic sense) can see the complete inequity of these disgusting attacks on the working people of this country then what the hell are Labour at?

    Reply
  • Ah Tuesday poetry night !! Nice..

    Reply
  • These drastic cuts are a direct result of continuing adherence to the Croke Park Agreement.

    Reply
    • No, they’re a direct result of the speculators and corrupt bankers/politicians who preceded over the destruction of our economy.

      Reply
    • Dave 01/05/12 #

      Yes, them, and the massive increase in spending on welfare and PS wages that took place during the boom, funded by taxes on an over inflated property boom!

      Reply
    • @ Martin. You have correctly identified the cause the problem, but continuing with the Croke Park Agreement is why we can’t fix it without inflicting more harm on the most vulnerable in society. Poor people are an easy target for politicians: they generally don’t vote at general elections, but trade union members do.

      Reply
    • Trade unions members are mostly middle to low income earners. Maybe even the poor people you talk of….my point being, public sector workers are not the enemy. Slash high earners, slash union bureaucrats, slash politician’s wages, yes! But cutting the wages of working people is as regressive as slashing social welfare.

      Reply
    • @ Martin 42% of public servants are paid more than the average industrial wage in their BASIC salary before any of the myriad of allowances and benefits-in-kind are applied. This is an unsustainable burden on the private sector. The Government, especially Labour, lack the courage to tackle this issue, instead preferring to tax the private sector and, most recently, targeting social welfare recipients. Clearly, the welfare system needs to be properly policed and defrauders prosecuted. Clearly also, certain private sector individuals can, and should, pay more tax. However, without substantial reform any additional revenues raised will simply be squandered (e.g. increased spending in the HSE in the Celtic tiger era did not necessarily translate into the provision of a better health service)

      Reply
    • Barry, you’re falling for the divide and conquer strategy of the FG/Labour government. They know they can eventually destroy Croke Park but only if a wave of public opinion is behind them. So they employ their friends in the “objective” media to run a hate campaign against public sector workers.

      You’re looking at the wrong us and them. The us is all working people, the them is the super rich, the establishment and the real instigators of this crisis. If they succeed in dividing us then we’ll never turn on them, and people are falling for it!

      Reply
  • I am sick of hearing always the same 10% comparison, maybe it’s bad but not representative. All (?) the rest are also paying taxes and are squeezed more and more for the past few years. Lets unite and try to WORK ourselves out of this!

    Reply
    • Exactly. It is never mentioned that in 2009, the top 5% of income earners paid nearly 50% of all income tax raised. The top 20% of income earners paid 80% of all income tax raised. (CSO).

      Reply
    • @ Ryan

      There are two main reasons for this -

      The top income earners earn vastly more than low income earners & the inequality has never been higher in 100years.

      Taxation has shifted steadily to regressive ‘flat’ taxation. Taxes like VAT & other taxes at point of sale have all risen. These affect low income earners massively more than the wealthy.

      But if we weren’t forgoing around €20 billion per year in lost production of goods & services – real wealth – thru’ a deliberate policy of involuntary unemployment for nearly 1 in 5 available workers, we would all be better off (except the top few percent, who might be slightly worse off but still very wealthy)..

      Such policies are driven by the vested interests of the top few percent, here & in Europe, who, despite declining incomes for the vast majority & deepening recession, are seeing their wealth (‘net worth’) +increase+ by around 5% per year. (According to reports on ‘High Net Worth Individuals’ by Merill Lynch & others.)

      Political leaders are economics imbeciles, as are their economics advisers & most mainstream academics as regards +macro+ economics & monetary/banking systems. But then, most of them are members of the top few percent club.

      If we had taken the appropriate steps 3 or 4 years ago, across the Eurozone, we could have stimulated growth back to near full employment & output already – and at no cost or borrowing whatever.

      How? By adopting MMT macro economics principles applied to the fiat Euro currency we already have.

      Quote (verbatim):

      “Academically, MMT has never been challenged. From what I study on it, they are right.”

      Bernard Lietaer, former career central banker, Professor of International Finance & respected expert on monetary systems & banking.

      Why is it not even debated in the mainstream, let alone adopted?

      Simple. The financial sector elites, that both caused the crisis & dictate policy since, do not want their private monopoly on the creation of all new money as debt in their favour to either come to public attention or be challenged. They also profit off instability, booms & busts alike They pay most economists salaries & have dominated the thinking of the entire profession for at least 3 decades with their own narrative & narrow agenda.

      Reply
    • @ Ryan Not mentioned either is the fact that 15 people die each and every day on this island due to the massive inequality in society – particularly in regards to access to health care. But I suppose increasing poverty will also increase the attrition rate at the bottom rungs of society and the government can claim that there are less people living in poverty … but won’t mention it’s because more people are dying because of poverty.

      Reply
  • As always it is those who have the least who pay the most. It is only a matter of time before we start to hear from the powers that be that this crisis can only be sorted out after the unemployed and those depending on welfare take up jobs that dont pay wages.

    Reply
  • Well said Noreen. I think people forget that its not like its a choice to be a lone parent and just idiotic to think that its ok to spend more on childcare than you would actually earn. As the article says 26 unemployed for every job and there are people leaving college with hons and masters degrees and applying for jobs in mac donalds. It is stupid to give healthy young men money and not make them do some community work or something rather than going after lone parents with mouths to feed!

    Reply
    • Men should work for social welfare to avoid cuts to lone parents. Have we sunk this low that we fight among ourselves for the scraps from the table.
      Sure it’s a burden on the state but bailing out banks bond holders and their cronies was madness. Iceland made the right choice in the interest of their nation and people.

      Reply
  • Invictus

    Out of the night that covers me,
    Black as the pit from pole to pole,
    I thank whatever gods may be
    For my unconquerable soul.

    In the fell clutch of circumstance
    I have not winced nor cried aloud.
    Under the bludgeonings of chance
    My head is bloody, but unbowed.

    Beyond this place of wrath and tears
    Looms but the Horror of the shade,
    And yet the menace of the years
    Finds and shall find me unafraid.

    It matters not how strait the gate,
    How charged with punishments the scroll,
    I am the master of my fate:
    I am the captain of my soul.

    Reply
    • Like it!!

      P.Pearse
      I am come of the seed of the people, the people that sorrow;
      Who have no treasure but hope,
      No riches laid up but a memory of an ancient glory
      My mother bore me in bondage, in bondage my mother was born,
      I am of the blood of serfs;
      The children with whom I have played, the men and women with whom I have eaten
      Have had masters over them, have been under the lash of masters,
      and though gentle, have served churls.
      The hands that have touched mine,
      the dear hands whose touch Is familiar to me
      Have worn shameful manacles, have been bitten at the wrist by manacles,
      have grown hard with the manacles and the task-work of strangers.
      I am flesh of the flesh of these lowly, I am bone of their bone I that have never submitted;
      I that have a soul greater than the souls of my people’s masters,
      I that have vision and prophecy, and the gift of fiery speech,
      I that have spoken with God on the top of his holy hill.
      And because I am of the people, I understand the people,
      I am sorrowful with their sorrow, I am hungry with their desire;
      My heart is heavy with the grief of mothers,
      My eyes have been wet with the tears of children,
      I have yearned with old wistful men,
      And laughed and cursed with young men;
      Their shame is my shame, and I have reddened for it
      Reddened for that they have served, they who should be free
      Reddened for that they have gone in want, while others have been full,
      Reddened for that they have walked in fear of lawyers and their jailors.
      With their Writs of Summons and their handcuffs,
      Men mean and cruel.
      I could have borne stripes on my body
      Rather than this shame of my people.
      And now I speak, being full of vision:
      I speak to my people, and I speak in my people’s name to
      The masters of my people:
      I say to my people that they are holy,
      That they are august despite their chains.
      That they are greater than those that hold them
      And stronger and purer,
      That they have but need of courage, and to call on the name of their God,
      God the unforgetting, the dear God who loves the people
      For whom he died naked, suffering shame.
      And I say to my people’s masters: Beware
      Beware of the thing that is coming, beware of the risen people
      Who shall take what ye would not give.
      Did ye think to conquer the people, or that law is stronger than life,
      And than men’s desire to be free?
      We will try it out with you ye that have harried and held,
      Ye that have bullied and bribed.
      Tyrants… hypocrites… liars!

      Reply
    • You have too much time on your hands Joseph, quit writing poetry and get off the scratcher….

      Reply
    • oh toorkeel,

      but that i had the inspiration to write such poetry!
      and but that we as a nation had an ounce of the courage of that man
      and his likes!

      Reply
    • Vote Yes for jobs Joseph. thats all the inspiration you need

      Reply
    • Clearly i know what u think of me,
      but
      do you not admire Padraig Pearse?

      Reply
    • Yawn.

      Reply
  • All I said about her was that there was nothing on the outside to suggest she was female and nothing on the inside to suggest she was human. FACT.

    Reply
  • Lol!

    Half man half beast!

    Reply
  • because im worth it!!!

    Reply

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