Can I just throw my two pence in on this one. I'm not taking sides because I think I'm somewhere half way between.
As some of you may know I work for a private company sub-contracted to the government. Our job is to take on a large portion of Job Centre Plus staff and help them back into employment. Needless to say I meet a lot of unemployed people in my week
Some of them are unfortunate in their circumstances and are out of work for genuine reasons. It might be through illness. For example I was chatting to this highly successful, intelligent middle aged man who cannot work due to Crohn's Disease. The poor bugger desperately wants to work but he can't. It all hinges on an operation he awaits
Then you get those who haven't got great experience, their skills are outdated but they still really want to work. Obviously you have to help them as much you can with courses and what not.
But then you get the largest group of all; the customers who simply do not want to work. I deal with this crowd. I meet 50 - 60 of them a week. Some for the first time and others I've seen time and time again within my case load. I have got to say that they all sing the same tune, and this is coming directly from the heart of it. I'm not speaking my opinion here, I am talking facts. Some of them are just so fecking arrogant it's not even funny. They almost look down on you because their housing situation is safe, they're earning money via a cash in hand arrangement and they are collecting their £160 odd every second week.
One of the most consistent conversations I find I'm having with this particular category is whether it's worth their while working from a financial perspective. We actually have a person employed who works it out for them based on various criteria. I'm not the one who brings this conversation up. It's always the customer. They are fully aware that it is completely pointless for them to go back to work (even working 37.5 hours per week) if the wage isn't right. They lose too many benefits and ultimately end up losing out. So they come in week in, week out and pretend to be interested in order to avoid being sanctioned by the Job Centre Plus. Most of them are aware, based on their skill sets and work experience, that the chances of landing a job that leaves them better off is slim.
This has to be considered, and a look at the government's approach to benefits has also to be considered before valid opinions are formed regarding benefits in general. People think differently. Some people just need to work to feel sane, and they are the ones who are glad to get off benefits and get into a job they might have the chance to work their way up in. Others just think of money, don't really see themselves as promotional material and would rather take an easier option. I have found that these are the people who complain the most when the government take a harder line obviously because it directly effects them. They are also the ones who moan most about the Police, the Government and they do not vote. We take statistics on all our customers
I personally feel the main problem keeping people on benefits is the fact that once you work over 15 hours a week you lose your benefits. In a job market that is volatile to say the least, those who collect the dole and are having their rent paid for them do not see the valid reason in working, particularly if they have other means of earning that are near impossible to detect