Author: Kitty S Jones

I’m a political activist with a strong interest in human rights. I’m also a strongly principled socialist. Much of my campaign work is in support of people with disability. I am also disabled: I have an autoimmune illness called lupus, with a sometimes life-threatening complication – a bleeding disorder called thrombocytopenia. Sometimes I long to go back to being the person I was before 2010. The Coalition claimed that the last government left a “mess”, but I remember being very well-sheltered from the consequences of the global banking crisis by the last government – enough to flourish and be myself. Now many of us are finding that our potential as human beings is being damaged and stifled because we are essentially focused on a struggle to survive, at a time of austerity cuts and welfare “reforms”. Maslow was right about basic needs and motivation: it’s impossible to achieve and fulfil our potential if we cannot meet our most fundamental survival needs adequately. What kind of government inflicts a framework of punishment via its policies on disadvantaged citizens? This is a government that tells us with a straight face that taking income from poor people will "incentivise" and "help" them into work. I have yet to hear of a case when a poor person was relieved of their poverty by being made even more poor. The Tories like hierarchical ranking in terms status and human worth. They like to decide who is “deserving” and “undeserving” of political consideration and inclusion. They like to impose an artificial framework of previously debunked Social Darwinism: a Tory rhetoric of division, where some people matter more than others. How do we, as conscientious campaigners, help the wider public see that there are no divisions based on some moral measurement, or character-type: there are simply people struggling and suffering in poverty, who are being dehumanised by a callous, vindictive Tory government that believes, and always has, that the only token of our human worth is wealth? Governments and all parties on the right have a terrible tradition of scapegoating those least able to fight back, blaming the powerless for all of the shortcomings of right-wing policies. The media have been complicit in this process, making “others” responsible for the consequences of Tory-led policies, yet these cruelly dehumanised social groups are the targeted casualties of those policies. I set up, and administrate support groups for ill and disabled people, those going through the disability benefits process, and provide support for many people being adversely affected by the terrible, cruel and distressing consequences of the Governments’ draconian “reforms”. In such bleak times, we tend to find that the only thing we really have of value is each other. It’s always worth remembering that none of us are alone. I don’t write because I enjoy it: most of the topics I post are depressing to research, and there’s an element of constantly having to face and reflect the relentless worst of current socio-political events. Nor do I get paid for articles and I’m not remotely famous. I’m an ordinary, struggling disabled person. But I am accurate, insightful and reflective, I can research and I can analyse. I write because I feel I must. To reflect what is happening, and to try and raise public awareness of the impact of Tory policies, especially on the most vulnerable and poorest citizens. Because we need this to change. All of us, regardless of whether or not you are currently affected by cuts, because the persecution and harm currently being inflicted on others taints us all as a society. I feel that the mainstream media has become increasingly unreliable over the past five years, reflecting a triumph for the dominant narrative of ultra social conservatism and neoliberalism. We certainly need to challenge this and re-frame the presented debates, too. The media tend to set the agenda and establish priorities, which often divert us from much more pressing social issues. Independent bloggers have a role as witnesses; recording events and experiences, gathering evidence, insights and truths that are accessible to as many people and organisations as possible. We have an undemocratic media and a government that reflect the interests of a minority – the wealthy and powerful 1%. We must constantly challenge that. Authoritarian Governments arise and flourish when a population disengages from political processes, and becomes passive, conformist and alienated from fundamental decision-making. I’m not a writer that aims for being popular or one that seeks agreement from an audience. But I do hope that my work finds resonance with people reading it. I’ve been labelled “controversial” on more than one occasion, and a “scaremonger.” But regardless of agreement, if any of my work inspires critical thinking, and invites reasoned debate, well, that’s good enough for me. “To remain silent and indifferent is the greatest sin of all” – Elie Wiesel I write to raise awareness, share information and to inspire and promote positive change where I can. I’ve never been able to be indifferent. We need to unite in the face of a government that is purposefully sowing seeds of division. Every human life has equal worth. We all deserve dignity and democratic inclusion. If we want to see positive social change, we also have to be the change we want to see. That means treating each other with equal respect and moving out of the Tory framework of ranks, counts and social taxonomy. We have to rebuild solidarity in the face of deliberate political attempts to undermine it. Divide and rule was always a Tory strategy. We need to fight back. This is an authoritarian government that is hell-bent on destroying all of the gains of our post-war settlement: dismantling the institutions, public services, civil rights and eroding the democratic norms that made the UK a developed, civilised and civilising country. Like many others, I do what I can, when I can, and in my own way. This blog is one way of reaching people. Please help me to reach more by sharing posts. Thanks. Kitty, 2012

A letter of complaint to Andrew Dilnot regarding Coalition lies about employment statistics

 10270806_319228004894921_8005540502444686357_n
I’ve written the following to Andrew Dilnot:

Dear Sir,

I write in response to the government claims made recently regarding employment. During Prime Minister’s questions in Parliament on Wednesday, Mr Cameron said that the number of people in full-time employment had risen. Other ministers, such as Esther McVey have echoed these claims.

We are growing the economy and we’ve got more people in work,”  Mr Cameron said.

And: The number of people out of work in the UK fell by 133,000 to a fresh five-year low of 2.2 million in the three months to March, official figures show.The jobless rate also fell to a five-year low of 6.8%, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has said”.

I am very concerned about the accuracy of these claims, and should like to challenge both the validity and reliability of them, given the current methodological problems with measurement, which the ONS have acknowledged in part, previously.

To count as unemployed, people have to say they are not working, are available for work and have either looked for work in the past four weeks or are waiting to start a new job they have already obtained. Someone who is out of work but doesn’t meet these criteria counts as “economically inactive”. The results from a selected sample, based on narrow criteria, are then weighted to give an estimate that reflects the entire population.

The other measure of joblessness – the claimant count – is published for each single month. It doesn’t suffer from the limitations of sample size and sampling frame, because it derives from the numbers of Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA) claimants recorded by Jobcentre Plus, so a monthly figure is possible right down to local level. But because many people who are out of work won’t be eligible for JSA, it’s an  even narrower measure.

I draw your attention to the following, taken from the Summary of recommendations: Response from the Employment Related Services Association (ERSA) to the Work and Pensions Select Committee inquiry into Jobcentre Plus, dated May, 2013:

Jobcentre Plus performance metrics:

  • The effectiveness of Jobcentre Plus (JCP) should be measured by sustained job outcomes rather than off-benefit flows to create greater incentives to support jobseekers into employment and provide a more accurate picture of success rates. This would address potential perverse incentives to sanction claimants inappropriately, plus ensure greater comparability between JCP provision and contracted out provision.
  •   Such a change could help to provide greater transparency in order to identify those who would benefit from intensive employment support. Such a performance metric would prevent the phenomenon of ‘cycling’, jobseekers moving between short term jobs and unemployment for many years, but not building up the length of time of continual unemployment to qualify them for specialist support.

In particular, I wish to draw your attention to this from the same document – Response from ERSA to the Work and Pensions Select Committee inquiry into JCP, 2013:

4.1. JCP is measured by off-benefit flows rather than sustained job outcomes. This can create perverse incentives to move jobseekers into short term employment outcomes, rather than refer them to long term contracted out support. It can also create a perverse incentive to sanction claimants as discussed below.

ERSA recommends that whilst off-benefit checks are monitored for national statistical purposes, job outcome and sustainment measure, comparable to the Work Programme, should be introduced for Jobcentre Plus. This would enable analysis between the performance of JCP and contracted out provision and provide accurate value for money comparisons.

5.1. DWP point to off-benefit flows as an indication of the effectiveness of pre-Work Programme support. However, analysis undertaken by Policy Exchange calls into question the validity of off-benefit figures as a success measure given that many do not go into sustainable employment or simply move on to another type of benefit.

8.1 As identified by the Committee in its report into the experience of different user groups on the Work Programme, the use of sanctions is inconsistent. 

Providers are obliged to notify Jobcentre Plus if a jobseeker fails to undertake an activity, for example if they miss an appointment. The decision as to whether to actually enact sanctions rests with Jobcentre Plus though. This means that sanctions are not applied even though a provider may think there is a clear case to do so. Conversely, a provider may be satisfied with the progress made by a participant but may be overruled by Jobcentre Plus who have a case for applying conditionality.

For example, one ERSA member reported that Jobcentre Plus decided to sanction a Work Programme participant for insufficient use of the Universal Jobmatch website, despite the fact that the provider had explicitly asked the participant to focus on resolving some other issues ahead of any formal job search activity. Sanctioning represented a great setback in the trust and progress made up to that point. ERSA agrees with the recommendation put forward by the Committee in its most recent report into the Work Programme for DWP to conduct a review of sanctioning activity with a view to ensuring that the processes are clearly understood by participants and consistently applied.

8.2 Part of the problem lies in the fact that Jobcentre Plus is measured by off-benefit flows rather than sustained job outcomes. This therefore means that a situation in which a Personal Advisor applies a sanction that may in fact damage an individual’s progress to employment, would register as a success according to the off-benefit flow measure. ERSA believes that measuring Jobcentre Plus success by sustained job outcomes would remove any perverse incentives to sanction individuals.

So, in summary, simply measuring how many people end their claims for benefits does not reveal the true impact of jobcentre services, nor does it accurately reflect the numbers of those moving into employment.

Let’s not forget that in 1996, the Conservative government introduced the jobseeker’s allowance that cut benefits to young people up to 18 years old – the new allowance was designed to replace unemployment benefit and income support. Young people excluded from eligibility for benefit are therefore absent from unemployment statistics.

The Department has simplified its performance measures and now primarily targets the move by claimants away from benefits, or “off-flow”, as a simple and intuitive measure of performance. However, this gives no information about how individual jobcentres perform in supporting claimants to work. Some may have found work but, in more than 40 per cent of cases, the reason for moving off benefits is not actually recorded.

I am also concerned that underemployment continues to remain very high, despite a small fall of 7,000 in the number in involuntary part time work, the total still stands at 1.42m. This is an increase of a 100 per cent beyond the pre-recession level of 701,000. The rise in employment also continued to be driven by self-employment, which is extraordinary as self-employment is a relatively small part of the UK jobs market. But although just one in seven workers are self-employed, over half of all jobs growth over the year has been in this type of employment. The TUC share this concern, and have said that some people have been forced in to self-employment as they have no alternative.

Previous TUC’s analysis  suggests that rising self-employment is part of a wider shift towards insecure employment, rather than as a result of a growing number of people starting up new companies as ministers have claimed. Analysis shows that self-employed workers are often earning less, underemployed, and have less job security than employees.

One very important issue not currently considered is that since the government does not track or follow up the destination of all those leaving the benefit system, as discussed, the off-flow figures will inevitably include many having their claim ended for reasons other than securing employment, including sanctions, awaiting mandatory review, appeal, death, hospitalisation, imprisonment, on a government “training scheme” (see consent.me.uk  and the Telegraph – those on workfare are counted as employed by the Labour Force Survey.)

Furthermore, last week Iain Duncan Smith met a whistle-blower who has worked for his Department for Work and Pensions for more than 20 years. Giving the Secretary of State a dossier of evidence, the former Jobcentre Plus adviser told him of a “brutal and bullying” culture of “setting claimants up to fail”.

“The pressure to sanction customers was constant,” he said. “It led to people being stitched-up on a daily basis.”

The whistle-blower wishes to be anonymous but gave his details to Iain Duncan Smith, DWP minister Esther McVey and Neil Couling, Head of Jobcentre Plus, who also attended the meeting. He said:

“We were constantly told ‘agitate the customer’ and that ‘any engagement with the customer is an opportunity to ­sanction.”

Iain Duncan Smith and his department have repeatedly denied there are targets for sanctions. However, the whistle-blower says:

“They don’t always call them targets, they call them ‘expectations’ that you will refer people’s benefits to the decision maker. It’s the same thing.”

He claimed managers fraudulently altered claimants’ records, adding: “Managers would change people’s appointments without telling them. The appointment wouldn’t arrive in time in the post so they would miss it and have to be sanctioned. That’s fraud. The customer fails to attend. Their claim is closed. It’s called ‘off-flow’ – they come off the statistics. Unemployment has dropped. They are being stitched up.”

Labour MP Debbie Abrahams, the member of the DWP Select Committee who set up the meeting, has renewed her call for an inquiry into inappropriate sanctioning. Debbie said:

“I am deeply concerned that sanctions are being used to create the illusion the Government is bringing down unemployment.

It is my belief that the claims made by David Cameron and his ministers are an unwarranted, far-fetched inferential leap from methodological premises that don’t stand up to scrutiny, for all of the reasons I have outlined. I felt obliged to draw your attention to this matter, not least because I am not alone in my concerns, and I feel very strongly that it is immoral of any government to mislead the public to which it is meant to be accountable.

Yours sincerely
Ms Susan Jones.

Related article: Austerity, socio-economic entropy and being conservative with the truth

Petition to Stop DWP Minsters Spinning Statistics 

995658_494538353949031_779653065_n
Thanks to  Robert Livingstone for the pictures.

Commons Select Committee Inquiry – Employment support for disabled people: Access to Work

536738_306169162785952_999031084_n
12 May 2014
The inquiry will consider the Department for Work and Pensions’ (DWP) Access to Work programme (AtW).

Background

AtW is designed to help long-term disabled people to start a new job, or remain in employment, with practical support which goes beyond the “reasonable adjustments” which employers are required to make by law.
AtW grants can cover, or go towards, a range of practical solutions to problems faced by disabled people in the workplace—for example, adaptations to equipment; taxis to work for those who cannot use public transport; and support workers. The programme helped around 31,000 people in 2012/13.
In 2011 the coalition Government commissioned Liz Sayce to conduct an independent review of employment support for disabled people. The Sayce review highlighted the effectiveness of AtW but found a lack of awareness about the programme, particularly amongst smaller employers and people with mental health conditions and learning disabilities. Liz Sayce recommended that DWP “transform [AtW] from Government’s best-kept secret to a recognised passport to successful employment”.
The Government has since taken some steps to increase the reach of AtW, for example through increased marketing of the scheme to employers, and extending it to cover a broader range of work experience, traineeship and apprenticeship placements.

Terms of reference for the inquiry

Submissions of no more than 3,000 words are invited from interested organisations and individuals.
The Committee is particularly interested in:
  • The AtW application and assessment processes, from the perspectives of employees and employers;
  • The adequacy of ongoing support, both in terms of the aids, adaptations and support workers provided through AtW, and the help and advice offered by DWP;
  • The effectiveness of AtW in supporting people with mental health conditions and learning disabilities;
  • AtW’s effectiveness in terms of helping disabled people to:
  1. Secure a job;
  2. Stay in employment; and
  3. Develop their careers; and
  • The steps taken so far by DWP to extend AtW, including its marketing and funding of the scheme.
Submissions do not need to address all of these points.
The deadline for submitting evidence is Friday 20 June.
How to submit your evidence
To encourage paperless working and maximise efficiency, select committees are now using a new web portal for online submission of written evidence. The web portal is available on our website.
The personal information you supply will be processed in accordance with the provisions of the Data Protection Act 1998 for the purposes of attributing the evidence you submit and contacting you as necessary in connection with its processing.
Each submission should:
  1. be no more than 3,000 words in length
  2. be in Word format with as little use of colour or logos as possible
  3. have numbered paragraphs
If you need to send a paper copy please send it to: The Clerk, Work and Pensions Committee, House of Commons, 7 Millbank, London SW1P 3JA
Material already published elsewhere should not form the basis of a submission, but may be referred to within a proposed memorandum, in which case a web link to the published work should be included.
Once submitted, evidence is the property of the Committee. It is the Committee’s decision whether or not to accept a submission as formal written evidence.
The Committee normally, though not always, chooses to make public the written evidence it receives, by publishing it on the internet (where it will be searchable), or by making it available through the Parliamentary Archives. If there is any information you believe to be sensitive you should highlight it and explain what harm you believe would result from its disclosure. The Committee will take this into account in deciding whether to publish or further disclose the evidence.
Select Committees are unable to investigate individual cases.
Further guidance on submitting evidence to Select Committees is available on the parliamentary website (PDF PDF 2.46 MB)Opens in a new window.
The deadline for submitting evidence is Friday 20 June.
scroll2
Currently, policy options are severely constrained by the Government’s “concern” to “maximise the freedom of individuals and of business”, to avoid interfering with the “operations of the market”, and to minimise the costs on private enterprise. However, attention must not be diverted from the campaign for enforceable and enforced anti-discrimination legislation. It is surprising that little regard has been given to employment equity with its promise of addressing fundamental issues about the potentially disabling role of the working environment.
Jobcentre Plus introduced some “operational changes” to the Access to Work programme. They admit that these have limited the scope of funding for applications after 1st October 2010. In other words, support has been cut.
The DWP said that:
“Our considerations have led us to take a view on a range of equipment that we feel should be regarded as either standard provision or the type of items that we could reasonably expect an employer to fund from their own resources, taking into account current working practices, advancements in technology and normal business standards.
As a result we no longer expect to provide any funding for a range of items that have previously fallen within our remit, including chairs, other ergonomic items, IT hardware and more commonly used software. “
Indeed, political focus since 2010 has been aimed at reducing both support and public sympathies for disabled people, with scant concern for our welfare and well-being. In fact the welfare “reforms” have discriminately, severely and adversely impacted on the “freedom of individuals” with disabilities.
Therefore the inquiry is a welcomed and timely one.

574630_305838552819013_1653237359_n

 Special thanks to Robert Livingstone for his brilliant memes.

Pfizer’s takeover bid is an attempt at asset-stripping and reflects Tory vested interests.

252299_486936058042594_609527550_n

“We are not convinced that Pfizer’s bid is anything more than an attempt by a US company to reduce its taxes by buying into a UK-owned company.Unite national officer Linda McCulloch.

“Pfizer has said it is committed to making a long-term investment in the UK through this purchase. Similar assurances were given to other companies acquired by Pfizer in the US and in Sweden. Subsequently, research facilities were shut down and thousands of high-skilled jobs lost.” Chuka Umunna, shadow Business Secretary.

“We see the future of the UK as a knowledge economy, not as a tax haven.”  Vince Cable.

Pfizer sold its UK-based research facilities in Sandwich, Kent, in 2011 with the initial loss of 2,400 jobs, many of which were highly skilled. Pfizer has also closed laboratories of US companies that it has acquired. The company’s track record has raised concerns that it may do the same with AstraZeneca’s research facilities – which many regard as a strategic national asset.

The former chief executive of AstraZeneca told the BBC’s business editor Kamal Ahmed he feared Pfizer would “act like a praying mantis and suck the lifeblood out of AstraZeneca.”  Sir David Barnes was chief executive of AstraZeneca until 2000 and deputy chairman until 2002.

Sir David said tax was “one of the key drivers ” behind the Pfizer offer for AstraZeneca, rather than a long-term commitment to research and development. He  added:

“That is a very narrow basis on which to base such a massive task.” 

“The risk is that the past history of Pfizer has shown that they tend to extract destructive synergies, they have done that in the past.”

AstraZeneca is the UK’s second biggest industrial spender on research and development, investing £2.8bn last year. In the UK AstraZeneca has eight sites and approximately  6,700 employees. Pfizer’s bid for AstraZeneca may be as high as £65bn.  Dr Mark Downs, chief executive of the Society of Biology, told BBC News that research and development was critical to the UK.

Critics of the takeover proposal have raised further concerns that Pfizer is trying to acquire AstraZeneca as a way of reducing its tax bill in the United States and as a prelude to breaking up its business into three parts.

If successful, the deal would be the biggest ever takeover of a UK firm by a foreign company. Shares in pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca rose by more than 14% almost immediately after US giant Pfizer confirmed its interest in a takeover bid.

The global pharmaceutical company has reported that its first quarter profit and revenue have slipped compared to the prior-year period thanks to continuing hits from drug patent expirations of some of its most valuable  drugs. The expiration of drug patents allow Pfizer’s competitors to manufacture generic forms of the name-brand drugs, which would be an excellent way for our NHS to save money.

Perhaps the $100 billion cash-and-stock offer, from a shareholder’s perspective, is also about obtaining AstraZeneca’s growing collection of patent-protected cancer drugs, a guaranteed cash cow.

As an added bonus, Pfizer can fund the takeover with untaxed foreign revenue and structure the deal as a reverse merger, incorporating the combined group in the UK, which further cuts its American tax bill.

Pfizer and other pharmaceutical companies are reliant on patent laws that grant them a time-limited monopoly on their drugs, especially in the US, the world’s largest and most profitable pharmaceutical market. Drugs are much more expensive in the US than in the UK.

The takeover bid doesn’t offer the UK public anything of benefit whatsoever. This has led both Ed Miliband and Vince Cable, in their concern, to call for the reviewing of terms under which the public interest test could be applied, to protect Britain’s scientific research base.

The history of the pharmaceutical industry certainly suggests that big mergers impede the progress towards new drugs, with research productivity falling. Studies of performance after big mergers in the period 1988-2004 found that in the three years following a business combination, there’s a clear decline in productivity as measured by the filing of new patents. Those companies that have undertaken mergers, when compared to peers that haven’t, not only reduce the amount of money they spend on research and development, but produce less innovative intellectual property.

In September 2009, Pfizer pleaded guilty to the illegal marketing of the arthritis drug Bextra for uses unapproved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and agreed to a $2.3 billion settlement, the largest health care fraud settlement at that time. Pfizer also paid the U.S. government $1.3 billion in criminal fines related to the “off-label” marketing of Bextra, the largest monetary penalty ever rendered for any crime. This was Pfizer’s fourth such settlement with the US Department of Justice in the previous ten years. 

Pfizer does not have a good track record of creating employment, either, contrary to what the conservatives have implied. As previously stated, on February 1, 2011, Pfizer announced the closure of the Research and Development centre in Sandwich, Kent, with the initial loss of 2,400 jobs, causing much damage to the local economy. Pfizer sold its research and development facility in Kent to a private consortium in 2012. 

Pfizer bought Warner-Lambert in 2000, makers of the anti-cholesterol drug Lipitor, in a deal worth around $111.8 billion, making it the world’s second biggest pharmaceutical firm. Soon after, it was announced that hundreds of workers would lose their jobs, equating to 10% of the combined workforce. Pfizer paid $68bn for Wyeth, the US maker of Effexor, an antidepressant, and Prevnar, a child meningitis vaccine in 2009. The US drug giant then unveiled nearly 13,000 job cuts in the first year after the process and the closure of eight factories. By the end of 2013, 33,500 jobs had been cut.

Osborne and Cameron claim that securing British jobs are the Government’s “sole interest” in supporting Pfizer’s merger bid, but that claim doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. Miliband is quite right to warn that he has “grave reservations” about the deal, based on the evidence that Pfizer has left in their wake.

Martin Gilbert, who heads Aberdeen Asset Management, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “We do have to look at this in UK terms because it is so important for our research and development in the UK, and Pfizer unfortunately has this reputation of being ruthless cost-cutters.”

Ed Miliband accused the government of “cheerleading” for Pfizer and called for an independent assessment of whether a takeover would be in Britain’s national economic interest. In the long term Pfizer have demonstrated that they are heavily orientated toward profitability, and not profitability through new research, but profitability from cost cutting.

Labour introduced a public interest test in 2002 allowing governments to block takeovers on three specific grounds: media plurality, national security or financial stability. Miliband says he wants to widen the test to include strategic importance, to cover areas such as science and technology. Speaking on BBC One’s The Andrew Marr Show, Mr Miliband called for an independent investigation into the takeover, and its likely impact on the “long-term science and industrial base of this country” and vowed to widen the scope of the public interest test allowing governments to block deals, if he becomes prime minister.

So why would the Tories be so intent on cheerleading a “business” move that clearly would not benefit the UK?

Here is an enlightening list of the keen (and already profiting) Conservatives with financial and vested interests in AstraZeneca and Pfizer:

Sir Alan Parker: who has holidayed with Mr Cameron and received a knighthood in the New Year honours list, is spearheading the UK lobbying operation for Pfizer’s controversial £63 billion bid. The lobbyist friend of David Cameron is at the heart of the bid by the American multinational Pfizer to take over British rival AstraZeneca.

Nick de Bois: the majority shareholder in Rapier Design Group, an events management company heavily involved with the private medical and pharmaceutical industries, and whose clients include leading names such as AstraZeneca. The company was established by the Tory MP in 1998. Last year it had a turnover of £13m. Last April, Rapier Design purchased Hampton Medical Conferences to “strengthen the company’s position in the medical sector”. It is involved in running conferences and other events for private-sector clients, and for NHS hospitals.

Dominic Grieve: in 2008. Shares in Reckitt Benckiser, GlaxoSmithKline, Diageo, Astrazeneca, Standard Chartered (Health insurance.)

Damian Collins: between 1999 and 2008 Mr Collins worked for marketing agency M&C Saatchi. M&C Saatchi clients include PPP healthcare, AXA insurance, Astrazeneca, Pfizer and Merck. See Lord Saatchi.  In 2008 he joined Lexington Communications as a senior Counsel before leaving to become a MP. Lexington Communications have a healthcare section, which says ‘With the NHS never far from the headlines, our dedicated team of healthcare communications consultants can advise you on how to successfully interact with a diverse range of stakeholders – in Westminster, Whitehall, the reformed NHS, across the patient group community and in the private sector – to help achieve your goals… Help you build relationships with influencers at a national level.’

Liam Fox: former Conservative MP – became shadow health secretary in 1999 – employs Adam Werrity as a paid intern in 2004 – by this time Adam Werrity becomes a director of health consultancy firm ‘UK Health Ltd’ (now dissolved), while Liam Fox was shadow health secretary of which he and Liam Fox were shareholders. Werrity owned 11.5% of UK Health Group and Fox owned 2.3%. In 2005 a researcher based in Mr Fox’s office worked ‘exclusively’ for the now closed Atlantic Bridge ‘charity’, which Liam Fox was the founding member; Mr Werrity became director, and which had links to radical right-wing neocons in the US. The researcher received funding from Pfizer Inc. He claimed ‘she has no function in any health role.’ The researcher was Gabby Bertin, who is now David Cameron’s press secretary. Received £5,000 to run his private office in October 2012 from investment company IPGL limited, who purchased healthcare pharma company Cyprotex.

Frances Maude: was a non-executive director of, is a web management software provider called, Mediasurface, whose product Morello CMS is used by Astrazeneca and the NHS. The company was acquired by content management solutions, Alterian, in 2008.

Priti Patel: worked for drinks company Diageo, before joining Weber Shandwick, becoming a director of public affairs. Weber Shandwick was created and built by Lord Chadlington and has a specialist healthcare focus with companies including Astra Zeneca, Pfizer, and Roche, and also the NHS.

Lord Ashcroft: Chairman of Chime Communications Group, whose companies include Bell Pottinger, and whose lobbying clients include Southern Cross, BT Health and AstraZeneca.

Lord Bell: also Chairman of Chime Communications group, whose companies include Bell Pottinger, and whose lobbying clients include Southern Cross, BT Health and AstraZeneca.

Lord Glendonbrook: has shares in Ansell Ltd NPV (healthcare), Abbott Laboratories, supplies NHS with Lab equipment, reagents. Shares in Astrazeneca biopharaceuticals – The NHS is the primary customer for Astrazeneca medicines in the UK. Shares in GlaxoSmithKline Ord 25p (healthcare), GlaxoSmithKline (healthcare), Johnson & Johnson, which supplies the NHS. Shares in Novartis who threatened to pull out of the UK becaue the NHS safety trial rules. Shares in Novo Nordisk (pharmaceuticals) supplies NHS, shares in Pfizer Inc (pharmaceuticals) supplies NHS. Shares in Serco group, which has multiple contracts with NHS including PFI hospitals. Shares in Siemens AG, which supplies medical equipment to the NHS. Shares in Smith & Nephew, hip-replacement and bandaging group. Unilver plc, whose European venture capital arm Unilever Ventures joined with a company called Vectura to form a pharma arm to their company.

Earl Howe: was a patron of pro-market health think tank 2020health up until the election. The rules allow patronage without the need to register. 2020health have produced multiple publications sponsored by the likes of Pfizer, Tunstall and other healthcare companies. They have a membership list that is hidden. There are currently four patrons of 2020health – who all have healthcare links

Baroness James: has shares in AstraZeneca (pharmaceuticals). The NHS is the primary customer for Astrazeneca medicines in the UK. GlaxoSmithKline plc (healthcare) supplies the NHS. Shares in Reckitt Benckiser Group plc, which produces drugs for the NHS amongst other health institutions.

Lord Lloyd-Webber: has shares in Catlin Group Limited, began writing Healthcare Professional Liability insurance in London in 1994. They offer extensive knowledge of medical, healthcare and pharmaceutical markets. Shares in Smiths Group plc, which produces medical equipment. Shares in AstraZeneca (pharmaceuticals). The NHS is the primary customer for Astrazeneca medicines in the UK

Baroness Noakes: has shares in BT Group (communications), which is one of the largest suppliers of communications to the NHS. BT was involved in the failed NHS computer system overhaul. Shares in Astrazeneca (Pharmaceuticals)

Lord Saatchi: a partner and shares in M&C Saatchi plc – a marketing company. Involved in multiple campaign projects for the government including the Change4Life project aimed at promoting healthier living to tackle obesity. M&C Saatchi also worked for PPP healthcare, AXA insurance. Saatchi have multiple pharmaceutical clients, including; Astrazeneca, Pfizer and Merck.

Baroness Wheatcroft: business Consultant, DLA Piper (legal services) a global law firm providing lobbying services to “clients in the health and social care sectors”. DLA Piper, which advised ministers on the failed £12 billion IT project for the NHS. Member of the Advisory Board, Pelham Bell Pottinger (financial and corporate communications) – Bell Pottinger whose lobbying clients include Southern Cross, BT Health and AstraZeneca.-

Cameron often inadvertently signposts the coming of a diabolical lie with the phrase “let me be clear”, as we know. We also know that so-called anonymisation of data offers no protection at all to identities and personal details. Campaigners described the plan as an”unprecedented threat” to confidentiality, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt says, rather worryingly, that it will be a boon to research.

It’s common knowledge that many Coalition MPs and Peers are heavily financially invested in pharmaceutical and health care companies. Over 200 parliamentarians have recent past or present financial links with, and vested interests in companies involved in healthcare and all were allowed to vote on the Health and Social Care Bill. The Tories have normalised corruption and made it almost entirely legal. Our democracy and civic life are now profoundly compromised as a result of corporate and financial power colonising the State, and vice versa.

The Health and Social Care Bill, 2012, has a telling insert: The Secretary of State’s duty as to research, which is “In exercising functions in relation to the health service, the Secretary of State must promote – (a) research on matters relevant to the health service, and (b) the use in the health service of evidence obtained from research”.

And also very worryingly: (1) The National Patient Safety Agency is abolished. (2) The National Patient Safety Agency (Establishment and Constitution) Order 2001 (S.I. 2001/1743) is revoked. (3) In section 13 of the NHS Redress Act 2006 (scheme authority’s duties of co-operation), omit subsection (2).

Perhaps this exploitative move comes as no surprise – Jobseekers are being coerced into experimental drug trials dressed up as “job opportunities

1098410_520975421305324_1267996419_n
Special thanks to Robert Livingstone for his brilliant memes.

Thanks to Social Investigations for providing the original list of MPs financial links to private healthcare.

Many thanks to my friend Sarah Homer for inspiring this by always asking the right questions.

Further reading:

NHS patient data to be made available for sale to drug and insurance firms

The commercialisation and undemocratising of the NHS: the commodification of patients

Petition – Stop the predatory takeover of AstraZeneca by Pfizer

 

Ed Miliband interview: The biggest issue we face is inequality

This interview was published by LabourList on May 6th

Ed Miliband has been touring the country by train in recent weeks as the Local and European elections loom into view.

On Friday, I joined him as he travelled to Cardiff and Bristol. We met in London’s Paddington Station bright and early. Miliband looks happy but a little tired. Perhaps that’s due to the extertions of a busy week, or perhaps it’s because it’s first thing on a Friday morning. Either would be understandable. Miliband is full of smiles though, upbeat after his announcement on rents the day before and relishing a day out on the campaign trail. I’m not sure where he gets the energy from – after just one day of train, walkabout, interview, train, walkabout, interview and another train I was exhausted.

Miliband, however, seemed less tired at the end of the day than he did at the start.

ed miliband cardiff 2014-05-06 09-37-39

As we travelled to Cardiff, I talked with him about the events of recent weeks, and what’s to come – but not before he tells me that the real story of the week is Sunderland’s potential escape from the Premier League drop zone. Either Miliband has become an overnight football fan (rather than his favoured Baseball) or he’s been well briefed on what might best put me in a good mood. He needn’t have bothered, the day before I’d seen him announce a policy on rents that is potentially popular, smart and effective. I’m already in a good mood. So is this policy as big a deal to Miliband as it is to me? Seemingly so – as we reported last week, it’s scheduled to be in Labour’s first Queen’s Speech. Yet he’s somewhat bemused by the response from the Tories to his plans:

“To hear some of the reaction, you’d think that Britain is about to become an exception in doing this. No – Britain is an exception at the moment. Most other countries when they look at this say “this housing market makes no sense at all”.”

And Miliband must have been expecting such a response. More than once he says that the Tories will “do anything and say anything” – something he’ll need to be ready for in the months ahead as he faces down the planned onslaught of personal attacks. Of course Miliband recently hired Obama veteran David Axelrod to help run the party’s election campaign. Axelrod is someone with real knowledge of what an attack machine looks like and how to rebut one. Was that part of Miliband’s thinking when he hired him?

“I’ve had a number of conversations with him over the last nine months or so, and it’s not something that we’ve spent talking about. We’ve talked a lot more about this issue – which he feels very strongly and which you saw from the Obama campaign – growing inequality in our countries, and who does a country serve? His point is that there are lots of deep trends that are part of this – some of them global trends – but government can have a real influence.”

Miliband has clearly warmed to Axelrod because – in his words “a deep thinker about ideas and progressive politics. But how much will we see of Axelrod in the UK? His first appearance was via a pre-recorded video in his US office, and although he’ll be in the UK for two days later this month, concerns are already circling in the party that he’s not going to be here all that much. Yet Miliband says that “he will be of real help both when he comes here – which he will do, I think, quite a lot between now and the election – and from the US as well”, suggesting that we’ll see him in the UK for more than just a smattering of days.

One of the areas that Axelrod will be working on will be the party’s “cost of living narrative”, which despite the best efforts of Tory HQ, Miliband won’t be backing away from making the arguments about pay, jobs and prices that have dominated his thinking over the past year:

“I think that it speaks to what this campaign is about for Labour – which is that we are talking about showing how we will deal with the biggest issue that we face in the country which is inequality and the cost of living crisis.”

“The Tories don’t quite know what to do, because they thought they’d be able to say that the cost of living crisis is over. But as I was saying well before it happened – the idea that the average of one indices overtaking another means that the problems are sorted totally misunderstands the central issue that we face, which is the link between the income of the country and people’s family finances.”

Inequality, then, is at the heart of the cost of living mantra. Wood, Miliband’s consiglieri, is speaking at an event with economist de jour Thomas Picketty in a few weeks – so has Miliband read his book?

“I have a copy of it (laughs). It’s a long read! I think it’s an important work, its analysis is obviously very important. People are very interested in it because it’s giving expression to what lots of people have been feeling about what’s happening, and giving an intellectual basis to it.”

Miliband – quite possibly the most well read and academic Labour leader in living memory (except, perhaps, his predecessor) is someone who is keen on an “intellectual basis” for politics. Perhaps that’s what the best part of a decade in the Treasury does for you, or perhaps it was the time spent at Harvard. Or maybe it’s the smart, academic people he likes to keep around him. But one thing that ties together his thoughts, from the abstraction of “predistribution” to the popular “retail offer” of the energy price freeze is the idea of intervening in broken markets in order to repair them:

“If we leave markets broken – if we leave them not working – it is ordinary families and working people who lose out. And so reforming broken markets is definitely a very important part of the agenda.”

And could the railways be the next target for market intervention from Miliband? Only 48 hours after our train journey, more than 40 PPCs from across the party called for the return of the rail franchises to public control as they expire. That’s something that I’ve been writing about for some time – and which 72% of LabourList readers back – so if it something he’d consider?

“It’s something that we’re looking at. My critique of the Tories on this is that they’re being deeply ideological on this. They think that it’s only the private sector that can run railways successfully, whereas something like East Coast – which has been in public hands – has done a good job. I think we’ve got to look at this in a pragmatic way, and we’ll do this at the right time.”

And how about the direction our particular train is heading in? As our interview comes to a close, the next station is announced as Newport. We’re in Wales – so what does Miliband make of the Tory attacks on the Welsh NHS? He’s keen to praise the good work that the Welsh government is doing – especially Jobs Growth Wales – before he adds:

“What I know is that no-one in Wales is calling for David Cameron to come and use his medicine. The Last time the Tories were in power in Wales health service waiting lists were two years long. The Tories will do anything and say anything – it comes with the territory.” 

Of course there’s a reason that we’re travelling around the country today. Whilst it’s great to visit Cardiff and Bristol, there are hugely important elections on May 22nd that will shape how Labour – and Miliband – approach the final year of this parliament. In recent weeks, UKIP have moved ahead in the EU election polls, with one giving them a double digit lead. So is Miliband worried about UKIP?

“No. I think the task for us is to set out our own positive agenda… They don’t have real solutions – we have real solutions. I do say to Labour people,  just take a step back and think about a party that wants to charge for GP access for example – that is not a party of working people.”

Unsurprisingly, Miliband didn’t want to get into the specifics of how Labour will do in the May 22ndelections. They promise to be a real test for Labour, and could prove damaging should the party fall behind UKIP. But Miliband acting as he was on Friday, comfortable in what he’s saying, calm about the attacks he faces and thoughtful about the challenges facing Britain should give heart to Labour activists.

48 hours later, I watched Miliband on Marr. It’s not often the format in which he’s excelled. He’s come across as uptight and evasive before. He’s looked cornered. Not this Sunday. The Miliband on Marr’s sofa this weekend was the same one that sat across from me in a railway carriage last week. Unflappable. Calm. Measured. Comfortable. It was his best Sunday morning performance by some considerable distance – and he even took Nigel Farage to task. No mean feat.

The next year is a huge one for Miliband and the Labour Party. One of the biggest tests of our organisation and resolve comes just two weeks from now. No-one yet knows how any of this will end. But Miliband seems increasingly ready for the fight ahead.

That can only be a good thing.

1796655_294409220710133_3373329_n

UKIP: Parochialism, Prejudice and Patriotic Ultranationalism.

999622_566748676727998_1599547969_n (1)

Political outgrouping

Over the past four years, we have witnessed the political right using rhetoric that has increasingly transformed a global economic crisis into an apparently ethno-political one, and this also extends to include the general scapegoating and vilification of other groups and communities that have historically been the victims of prejudice and social exclusion: the poorest, unemployed and disabled people. These far-right rhetorical flourishes define and portray the putative “outsider” as an economic threat. This is then used to justify active political exclusion of the constitutive Other.

The poorest have been politically disenfranchised. Politically directed and constructed cultural and social boundaries, exclusionary discourses and practices create and define strangers who are further stigmatised and reduced by labels of “economic freerider.”  Groups are politically redefined and reduced to a basic, standard right wing category: “a burden on the state”. In Zygmunt Bauman’s analysis of the Holocaust, the Jews became “strangers” par excellence in Europe, the Final Solution was an extreme example of the attempts made by societies to excise the (politically defined) uncomfortable and indeterminate elements existing within them. Here in the UK, it’s evident that many citizens now feel like strangers in their own communities – they have become politically alienated. 

Definitions of citizenship and associated privileges have been reformulated and restricted here in the UK, and the current Conservative neoliberal framework of intensifying an aggressive competitive individualism is further motivated by far-right reforms that embed socioeconomic Darwinism.

This has provided opportunity for UKIP to become established as a populist part of the mainstream political conversation, the Tory rhetoric, founded on social divisions and established hierarchy, has created a space for UKIP’s subversive “insurgency”.

UKIP has an extremist appeal that is based entirely on fear-mongering, and attempts to shape and perpetuate fears, resentment and hatreds, social group phobias and deliberate attempts at further undermining social cohesion. UKIP try to make this extremely divisive approach somehow “respectable”, (by the frequent use of phrases such as “we say what many think”, “we speak our minds” and “it’s not racist to be worried about too many people coming here,” which are used to attempt to normalise and justify what are actually very objectionable, prejudice-laden opinions, for example) whilst offering nothing at all that might improve our living conditions and quality of life.

UKIP is also manipulating an anti-politics and anti-establishment public mood. This is not just about gaining electoral success but in shifting the terms of debate. Farage admits that UKIP’s effect on the Tories is “psychological not numerical”. His success in this encourages the further right Tory backbenchers, encourages the populist strategies of Lynton Crosby, as it forces political and media focus on right-wing concerns, like welfare and immigration. Public moral boundaries are being pushed.   

UKIP utilises, amplifies and perpetuates an increasingly poisonous climate of distrust and cynicism. UKIP manipulate public views and in particular, they perpetuate a myth that politicians of all colours are an out of touch elite that is far removed from, and largely unconcerned with, the everyday struggles of “ordinary people.” But the category of “ordinary people” is an ever-shrinking one, from this perspective.

UKIP make the mistake of portraying the entire political class as pampered elitistswhich is grossly inaccurate. Whilst it’s true that the Conservative party most certainly can claim aristocratic membership, the same isn’t true of the Labour party. Furthermore, Farage, an ex-Tory public school boy (and Miliband attended a comprehensive school), an ex-stockbroker, with offshore tax havens and an inclination for far-right policy is hardly likely to be “in touch” with the man and woman on the Clapham omnibus.

Although UKIP suffers from a chronic, persistent failure to appeal to three key groups of voters – women (because of the chauvinistic and anti-feminist views of UKIP members and politicians); young people (who find the party almost farcically out of touch with their own world-view) and ethnic minorities (because of its strident and emotive language about immigration). UKIP does represent something of a “blue-collar revolt”- its electoral base is “old, male, working class, white and less educated,” say academics Matthew Goodwin and Robert Ford.

Anti-intellectual prejudice is a strong undercurrent amongst UKIP’s supporters. Anti-intellectualism is a dominant feature of far-right politics – especially those entailing authoritarianism, fascism and Nazism.

 10403497_472514972893769_324031577992330978_n
Anti-intellectualism and inverted snobbery from the patriotic nationalist and racist Britain First site on Facebook

Parochialisation

The Conservatives have parochialised both explanations of and responses to the global economic crisis. Parochialism entails neglect of the interests of identified “outsiders”, and this kind of isolationist tendency has also provided a political platform for nationalism. Parochialism tends to support inter-group hostilities, and it tends to lead to violations of human rightsParochialism directly opposes a fundamental set of principles that constitute these rights: namely that all humans beings are of equal worth, and that human rights are universally applicable – they apply to everyone.

The alternative perspective is social Darwinism, which is used to justify a hierarchy of entitlement to rights. Modern eugenics was rooted in the Social Darwinism of the late 19th century, with all its metaphors of fitness, competition, and rationalisations of inequality. For progressives, eugenics was a branch of the drive for social improvement or perfection that many reformers of the day thought might be achieved through the deployment of science to “good” social ends. Eugenics, of course, drew appreciable support from Conservatives, concerned to “prevent” the “proliferation” of lower income groups and save on the cost of providing support for them.

The progressives progressed. They ceased to believe that progress was about advancing the human race by physical “improvement” – that kind of supremacist view was a product of its time – context bound by a cumulatively catastrophic zeitgeist. Progressives liberated themselves from the superficial characteristics and taxonomic ranking of human beings – the emphasis on “what” we are – and began to cherish “who” we are, delving into our human potential and celebrating our diversity as much as our individual equal worth.

Although eugenics programmes are usually associated with Nazi Germany, they could, and did, happen everywhere. They focused on manipulating heredity or breeding to produce politically defined “better” people and on eliminating those considered biologically inferior. In the 1920s and 1930s, eugenic sterilisation laws were passed in 24 of the American states, in Canada, and in Sweden. Here in the UKMalthus saw overpopulation as the cause of misery and poverty, which was an element of the social Darwinism that contributed to the devaluing of human life due to its stress on the struggle for existence and competition for resources. 

Eugenic doctrines were criticised increasingly during the inter-war years, on scientific grounds and for their blatant class and racial bias, and were attacked widely when a eugenics narrative and role in the holocaust was revealedHuman rights evolved in response to the Holocaust, to ensure that race genocide doesn’t happen again. And to the growth of fascism. Human rights are premised on the belief that all human lives are of equal value. That is why those rights apply to everyone, that was the whole point of them, and to exclude people on whatever basis from enjoying those rights is to stray onto a very dangerous slippery slope in terms of recognising the equal worth of other human beings. Again.

The concept of adaptation remains, and allows the right to claim that the rich and powerful are better adapted to the social and economic climate of the time, and the concept of natural selection perpetuates the supremacist argument that it is natural, normal, and proper for the “strong” to thrive at the expense of the weak. Strength, however, is conflated with wealth.

British and American imperialists employed the language of social Darwinism to promote and justify Anglo-Saxon expansion and domination of other peoples. Such different personalities as Machiavelli, Sir Francis Bacon, Ludwig Gumplowicz, Adolf Hitler, and Benito Mussolini, each reasoning on different grounds, nevertheless arrived at similar conclusions. Imperialism to them is part of the natural struggle for survival. Those endowed with “superior” qualities are “destined” to rule all others. Imperialism has been morally excused as the means of liberating peoples from tyrannical rule or of bringing them the benefits of a “superior” way of life. Imperialism is all about human aggressiveness and greed, the search for security, drive for power and prestige and nationalist emotions, amongst other things.

Nationalism is anti-progressive. It’s a paradigm of competitive individualism that further undermines principles of cooperation, equality and social cohesion. It’s also a recognisable symptom of the rise of fascism. The UKIP brand of Parish pump politics nurtures fear, spite and vilifies people on the basis of one of our most wonderful assets: our human diversity.

Ordinary people did not caused the financial crisis. The real culprits are sat untouched in mansions, making even more money from the “austerity” imposed on the poorest and some of the most vulnerable members of society, whilst too many comply with misdirected blame of their oppressed brothers and sisters, rather than a political elite that have deliberately engineered a prolonged recession in the UK. Conservative governments always do. Our current social hardships have been created by this government’s policies and not powerless immigrants, disabled people or the unemployed. These are people whose lives are being broken by an elite.

The answer to our problems isn’t making the rest of the world go away, it isn’t bigotry and “national pride” – we surely learned those are not tenable answers from the terrible consequences of Nazism.

Dividing people by using blame and prejudice only weakens our opposition to oppression.

UKIP, however, have capitalised on the current government’s lack of clear, open and honest debate about why the UK has become more unequal and anomic (anomie – a sociological concept – is the breakdown of social bonds between an individual and the community resulting in fragmentation of social identity and rejection of self-regulatory values. This has been heightened by a significant discrepancy between Conservative ideology – rhetorical values commonly professed – and what is real, actual and achievable in our everyday life).

UKIP have exercised a crass manipulation of the existentially destabilised: many people are confused and anxious about where they belong, where their country is heading, and why the current government won’t do anything about it. Of course Farage denies vigorously that in giving these anxieties a directed voice they are merely acting as outlets for prejudice and faux protest votes. But prejudice, protest and a politics of fear is nevertheless UKIP’s leitmotif.

And farce. Like the UKIP councillor blamed the recent floods on the Government’s decision to legalise gay marriage. David Silvester said the Prime Minister had acted “arrogantly against the Gospel,” and God had punished the Thames Valley as a result. And John Sullivan, a UKIP candidate, explained that physical exercise in schools can “prevent homosexuality”.

Farage says he represents such “ordinary people”. As I stated earlier, he is an ex-Tory, a public school-educated former banker and stockbroker, whose policies will help him and his kind, maintaining the status quo, whilst presenting a fake challenge to the establishment. He set up a trust fund in an offshore tax haven, in a bid to avoid paying thousands of pounds in tax money. So UKIP are a “protest vote” for pretty much more of the same.

Farage claims he is the voice of “common sense”, whilst having allegiance with every kind of homophobic, wild conspiracy theorist, misogynist, racist, chauvinist , classist, peevish, vindictive and resentful inadequate. The only sense he and his followers seem to have in common is a fear of anyone who is not like them.

Farage disowned the entire 2010 UKIP manifesto – and not in the transparent manner of an honest politician admitting to past mistakes. Instead, he pretended he knew nothing of his party’s promises for a dress code for taxi drivers and a state-enforced repainting of the nation’s trains in traditional colours. Imagine if anyone else in public life said that a document they had put their name to, and claimed ownership of, was “drivel” and tried to avoid awkward questions by pretending that it had never been read. 

“Our traditional values have been undermined. Children are taught to be ashamed of our past. Multiculturalism has split our society. Political correctness is stifling free speech”, states the UKIP manifesto. Their “Pocket Guide to Immigration” promises to “end support for multiculturalism and promote one, common British culture”. After attracting some negative publicity, it has disappeared from here, but an archived version can be seen here.

Conformity, prejudice and language

Bigots quite often seem to use the freedom of speech plea to justify their prejudice. They say they have a right to express their thoughts. But speech is an intentional ACT. Hate speech is intended to do harm – it’s used purposefully to intimidate and exclude vulnerable groups. Hate speech does not “democratise” speech, it tends to monopolise it. Nor is it  based on reason, critical thinking or open to debate. Bigotry is a crass parody of opinion and free speech. Bigots are conformists – they tend not to have independent thoughts. Prejudice and Groupthink are longstanding bedfellows.

Being inequitable, petty or prejudiced isn’t “telling it like it is” – a claim which is an increasingly common tactic for the right, and particularly UKIP – it’s just being inequitable, petty or prejudiced.  And some things are not worth saying. Really. We may well have an equal right to express an opinion, but not all opinions are of equal worth. And UKIP do frequently dally with hate speech. Hate speech generally is any speech that attacks a person or group on the basis of e.g. race, religion, gender, disability, or sexual orientation. 

In law, hate speech is any speech, gesture or conduct, writing, or display which is forbidden because it may incite violence or prejudicial action against or by a protected individual or group, or because it disparages or intimidates a protected individual or group. Critics have argued that the term “hate speech” is a contemporary example of Newspeak, used to silence critics of social policies that have been poorly implemented in order to appear politically correct

This term was adopted by US Conservatives as a pejorative term for all manner of attempts to promote multiculturalism and identity politics, particularly, attempts to introduce new terms that sought to leave behind discriminatory baggage attached to older ones, and conversely, to try to make older ones taboo.

“Political correctness” arose originally from attempts at making language more culturally inclusive. Critics of political correctness show a curious blindness when it comes to examples of conservative correctness. Most often, the case is entirely ignored or censorship of the left is justified as a positive virtue. Perhaps the key argument supporting this form of linguistic and conceptual inclusion is that we still need it, unfortunately. We have a right-wing Logocracy, creating pseudo-reality by prejudicial narratives and words. We are witnessing that narrative being embedded in extremely oppressive policies and in the justification rhetoric.

The negative impacts of hate speech cannot be mitigated by the responses of third-party observers, as hate speech aims at two goals. Firstly, it is an attempt to tell bigots that they are not alone. It validates and reinforces prejudice.

The second purpose of hate speech is to intimidate a targeted minority, leading them to question whether their dignity and social status is secure. In many cases, such intimidation is successful. Furthermore, hate speech is a gateway to harassment and violence. (See Allport’s scale of prejudice, which shows clearly how the Nazis used “freedom of speech” to incite hatred and then to incite genocide.)

As Allport’s scale indicates, hate speech and incitement to genocide start from often subtle expressions of prejudice. The dignity, worth and equality of every individual is the axiom of international human rights. International law condemns statements which deny the equality of all human beings.

Article 20(2) of the ICCPR requires states to prohibit hate speech. Hate speech is prohibited by international and national laws, not because it is offensive, but rather, because it amounts to the intentional degradation and repression of groups that have been historically oppressed.

The most effective way to diffuse prejudice is an early preventative approach via dialogue: education and debate. Our schools, media and public figures have a vital part to play in positive role-modelling, in challenging bigotry, encouraging social solidarity, respect for diversity and in helping to promote understanding and empathy with others.

Hate speech categories are NOT about “disagreement” or even offence. Hate speech doesn’t invite debate. It’s about using speech to intentionally oppress others. It escalates when permitted, into harassment and violence. We learn this from history, and formulated human rights as a consequence. UKIP would have us unlearn the lessons of the Holocaust so that people can say “I’m not being  racist, but…” or “It’s not wrong to say immigrants should be sent home…” and so on.

There are recognisable effects of Social Norms and conformity on Prejudice: Minard (1952) investigated how social norms influence prejudice and discrimination. The behaviour of black and white miners in a town in the southern United States was observed, both above and below ground.

Results: Below ground, where the social norm was friendly behaviour towards work colleagues, 80 of the white miners were friendly towards the black miners. Above ground, where the social norm was prejudiced behaviour by whites to blacks, this dropped to 20.

Conclusion: The white miners were conforming to different norms above and below ground. Whether or not prejudice is shown depends on the social context within which behaviour takes place. See also Milgram experiment on conformity – Milgram showed that people tend to conform in groups and defer to authority even when it means behaving immorally. It’s very depressing reading, but it’s important to recognise the role of conformity and obedience in the genocides we’ve witnessed, and Allport’s work is also important here too. Asch came up with more optimistic results, showing that an objection from just one person could change the behaviour of the whole group.

And that’s our responsibility, surely.

UKIP are not simply a collective of classist, sexist, xenophobes and homophobes: they are omniphobes. Political rhetoric has been reduced to simplistic, crude dichotomies which provoke arguments instead of rational debate, the populist themes trade on fear, and fear provokes strongly emotive responses. You can’t reason with those, they don’t lend themselves well to rational discourse.

I am appalled and horrified at the public stage that UKIP have gained, at how the right generally have pushed back our boundaries of decency and are cultivating prejudice and fear towards politically constructed Others, which share common themes with Nazi ideology, and worse, some people don’t see these terrifying connections. The increasing class of the poorest and most vulnerable people are being turned into outsiders by both the Conservatives and UKIP. And that is NOT okay.

Farage demands that “We want our country back.” So do I. But my vision is very different to the shrunken patriotic neo-imperialism of Farage. No one hates his own country more that the resentful nationalist – and how they complain that “things ain’t what they used to be”.

My country is multicultural, rich and diverse, it is one that has learned from history and evolved. It is founded on progress and civil rights movements, past battles of the oppressed fought and won – our hard-earned freedoms to be who we are without fear.

We have a government that reduces benefits so that poorly paid workers can feel a little better about being so poorly paid. It’s a government that is all about lowering standards, and crucially, our expectations, and our regard of each other. So much mean spirited resentment has been kindled and perpetuated by the Coalition amongst the oppressed, aimed at the oppressed.

I recognise political themes of oppression and repression, and it is NOT okay. How can anyone think it is?

This governments’ schadenfreude – motivation for the vindictive policies that we’ve seen this past 4 years, which target the most vulnerable citizens most of all – is debated. Some people believe that the policies are a consequence of a redistribution of wealth from the poorest to the wealthy rather than being malicious acts. But the Tories laughed on hearing the accounts of suffering of the poor because of the bedroom tax and the food banks in parliament, for all to see.

But entertaining the idea for a moment that the inflicted suffering isn’t a motivation but a consequence, well that would make the Government at the very least indifferent, callous and unremorseful, since they show a supreme lack of concern for the plight of those least able to defend themselves against injustice and inflicted poverty. Either way, I know evil when I see it, and this government ARE evil. The shock and anger at the recognition that all of those principles and beliefs we held dear – such as justice, fairness, democracy, freedom, Government accountability, equality (at least in terms of the worth of each life), institutionalised philanthropy – all trodden under foot by the social Darwinist aristocratic elite in just 4 years. And the faith we each had in those collective ideals undermined by the constant perpetuation of divisive propaganda tactics from the right.

Dividing people by using blame and prejudice only weakens our opposition to oppression.

We must each take some responsibility and work to put right the terrible mistakes and inhumane acts that we’ve allowed to be written into our collective history. Our starting point must be founded on an egalitarian doctrine that maintains that all humans are equal in fundamental worth and social status. We have to learn and evolve. If we remain silent and indifferent, that makes us nothing more than complicit bystanders.

68196_116423458427191_5364492_n

Pictures courtesy of Robert Livingstone

We can forgive children who are afraid of the dark, the real tragedy of life is when men and women are afraid of the light.

 

Related

DEFINING FEATURES OF FASCISM AND AUTHORITARIANISM 

Nigel Farage schooldays letter reveals concerns over fascism

Techniques of neutralisation: Cameron says keep calm and carry on climbing Allport’s ladder

Winston McKenzie, organiser for UKIP, Croydon, defending normalisation and legitimisation of racism and racist language in the UKRadio 4 PM, discussion with Sunny Singh; Friday May 23rd, 2014.

Remarkable linguistic bullying from McKenzie and a Godwin’s law type of approach to the word ‘racism’, which UKIP seem to have adopted to shut down critical debate about racism.

Racism and other forms of prejudice are normalised almost inscrutably, in stages as Allport’s ladder demonstrated all too well as an explanation of how the Holocaust happened. Allport describes social processes, and how the unthinkable becomes acceptable, by a steady erosion of our moral and rational boundaries.  

The prejudice happens on a symbolic level first – language – and it starts with subtlety, such as the use of phrases like ‘immigrants “swamping” our shores’ in the media, as part of political rhetoric and so on. Racists very seldom own up to being racists. They also quite often employ linguistic bullying strategies that makes challenging them very difficult. But as history has taught us, we must challenge them.

 

 

Labour calls on Government To Save Independent Living Fund

tory cuts

MP calls for retention of vital fund which benefits the most severely disabled.

Originally posted here on April 1, 2014 by Dame Anne Begg.

Aberdeen South MP, Dame Anne Begg, has called on the Government to save the Independent Living Fund (ILF) and allow the most disabled people to continue to live independently in their homes. She has also called on the Scottish Government to clarify what they will do to protect the independence of those living with a severe disability in Scotland.

To show her support for the retention of Independent Living Fund, which is relied upon by over 18,000 severely disabled, Dame Anne is the primary sponsor an Early Day Motion calling on the Government to reverse their decision to close the fund in June 2015. You can view the EDM here.

The Independent Living Fund provides discretionary cash payments directly to disabled people so they can purchase care from an agency or pay the wages of a privately employed Personal Assistant (PA). This support enables disabled people to choose to live in their communities rather than in residential care.

The Government has stated that money will be devolved to already cash strapped local authorities in England, which means that it would cease to be ring-fenced and would be subject to normal constraints and cuts within a local authority budget. And the local authorities have already said that they will not be able to offer the current level of financial support provided on ILF, potentially forcing many disabled people to move out of their homes and into residential care homes.

 Further, the Scottish Government has given no indication whether this will also be the case in Scotland and Dame Anne has written to them seeking clarification.

 Dame Anne said:

I have spoken to a number of constituents and their families who have told me how important ILF is in allowing them to live independent and fulfilling lives in our community and I know that losing this support will have a devastating impact on them. 

“Not only are my constituents concerned about losing the fund, but they are also living with the uncertainty with regards to what support will be provided after the ILF closes.”

The Government initially decided to close the fund by March 2015 but this was delayed until June 2015 after five disabled people challenged the Government’s decision in the High Court.

The Court of Appeal unanimously quashed the decision to close the fund and devolve the money, on the basis that the minister had not specifically considered duties under the Equality Act, such as the need to promote equality of opportunity for disabled people and, in particular, the need to encourage their participation in public life. The court emphasised that these considerations were not optional in times of austerity.

In March 2014, the Government announced that it would go ahead with the closure of the fund on 30th June 2015 saying that a new equalities analysis had been carried out by the Department for Work and Pensions.

995658_494538353949031_779653065_n
With thanks to Robert Livingstone for his legendary memes

‘Shoestring Army’ to battle government-imposed ‘slavery’ in the courts

It’s not a difficult task for a government to guarantee a safety-net that is always available for anyone who falls on hard times during an era of huge social and economic change. We all fund it, after all. And we all know that unemployment, injury or illness may happen to anyone through no fault of their own. It’s considered a duty of any first world government to provide the means of basic survival for its citizens and to fund that with the money we contribute via taxes. In fact such social and economic welfare is a human right. Article 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which the UK is a signatory to, reads:
Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control. Motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care and assistance. All children, whether born in or out of wedlock, shall enjoy the same social protection.

Mike Sivier's avatarMike Sivier's blog

Energising: Keith Lindsay-Cameron prepares to take his case to the police. Energising: Keith Lindsay-Cameron prepares to take his case to the police.

An activist from Somerset is raising his own ‘Shoestring Army’ to crowdsource funds and mount a legal challenge against the government’s new Claimant Commitment for jobseekers, after police said they were unable to arrest Iain Duncan Smith and Lord Freud for breaching the Human Rights Act.

Keith Lindsay-Cameron, of Peasedown St John, near Bath, was advised to obtain the services of a solicitor and raise a legal challenge in the courts after he made his complaint at Bath police station on Friday (May 2).

He said the conditionality regime that is part of the new Claimant Commitment will re-cast the relationship between the citizen and the State – from one centred on ‘entitlement’ to one centred on a contractual concept in which the government provides a range of support only if a claimant meets an explicit set of responsibilities…

View original post 590 more words

Judge refuses DWP leave to appeal ruling on Universal Credit reports

544547_466042163465317_917876792_n
This government has a track record of withholding crucial information from the public – we still await the release of the health and social care risk register, for example, despite the tribunal ruling in 2012. Amongst the four reports requested here, one is a risk register. The DWP have also refused to release information about the rising number of deaths associated with the impact of the welfare reforms on sick and disabled people since 2011. Such a lack of accountability and transparency is the hallmark of authoritarianism.
We know there is a huge and growing gap between Tory rhetoric and reality. In other words, the government are telling lies.

ukcampaign4change's avatarCampaign4Change

By Tony Collins

An information tribunal judge has unexpectedly refused consent for the Department of Work and Pensions to appeal his ruling that four reports on the Universal Credit programme be published.

The ruling undermines the DWP’s claim that there would be “chilling effect” if the reports were published.

The judge’s decision, which is dated 25 April 2014, means the DWP will have to publish the reports under the FOI Act  – or it has 28 days to appeal the judge’s refusal to grant consent for an appeal.  The DWP is certain to appeal again. It has shown that money is no object when it comes to funding appeals to keep the four reports secret.

In 2012 John Slater, who has 25 years experience working in IT and programme and project management, had requested the UC Issues Register, Milestone Schedule and Risk Register. Also in 2012 I requested a UC project assessment review by the…

View original post 951 more words

Breaking the Link between Disability and Poverty – full report

Breaking the Link between Disability and Poverty Report to the Labour Party by the Disability and Poverty Taskforce

April 2014

This is the report of the Independent Taskforce on Disability and Poverty,
commissioned by Liam Byrne MP in his role as Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, and chaired by Sir Bert Massie.

The views expressed in this report are those of the members of the Taskforce and will be considered as submissions to Labour’s policy review.

Foreword

Abbreviations

1. Introduction

2. Our guiding principles

3. Our recommendations

4. Understanding disability-related poverty

5. Improving the employment experience of disabled people

6. Improving the social security system for disabled people

7. Addressing the cost of living crisis for disabled people

8. A renewed commitment to equality for disabled people

Appendix 1. The social model of disability

Appendix 2. Disability and incapacity benefits timeline

Appendix 3. Taskforce chair and members

Foreword

“There was damp in the boys’ room. The fire was leaking carbon monoxide.”

“My daughter knows. She could see me worrying about it. I couldn’t believe it when she said: ‘Don’t worry mummy. I won’t have a birthday present this year.’ That made me cry so much. I felt so guilty for not being able to give them more.”

“It’s heat or eat. I choose eat. But it’s so cold. Sometimes I cry with it.”

Whether in paid work or not, disabled people are twice as likely as non-disabled people to experience material hardship – to be unable to afford two or more items from a list that includes food, clothing, furniture, household appliances and a computer.

Families supporting a disabled child are more than twice as likely as other families to be unable to keep a child’s bedroom warm enough in winter due to the cost of heating.

We believe that wise investment is needed to help disabled people and their families to escape poverty.

We believe that this investment is the right form of social insurance for everyone: anyone can acquire an impairment or long-term health condition.

If we want a resilient economy, we must ensure that people do not face insuperable barriers, or go without effective support, to work where they can do so.

If we want a fair social security system, we must recognise that some people are temporarily or permanently unable to work – and that many more will be temporarily or permanently limited in the type or hours of work that they can do. They should not be blamed for that.

If we want to tackle poverty and inequality, recognising that unequal societies are unhappy and less productive and resilient, we must recognise that at certain times people face unavoidable and additional costs of living a decent life that should be collectively supported.

Poverty can make people unwell. Poverty in childhood continues to affect the life chances of adults, disabled or not. Too many households with a disabled member are living in poverty in Britain. This causes untold suffering to members of those households – but it costs every one of us as well. We believe that tackling disabled people’s poverty is essential to our success and well-being as a nation.

Sir Bert Massie CBE
Chair
Disability and Poverty Taskforce
April 2014
Abbreviations

DLA Disability Living Allowance

DWP Department for Work and Pensions

ESA Employment Support Allowance

IB Incapacity Benefit

IMF International Monetary Fund

IVB Invalidity Benefit

JRF Joseph Rowntree Foundation

JSA Jobseeker’s Allowance

LHA Local Housing Allowance

NEET Not in employment, education or training

ODI Office for Disability Issues

PIP Personal Independence Payment

UKCES United Kingdom Commission on Employment and Skills

WCA Work Capability Assessment

WRAG Work-related activity group

1. Introduction

1.1 In office, Labour showed that public policy can significantly reduce child and pensioner poverty. There is no reason to doubt that public policy can – and in our view should – also reduce disabled people’s poverty.

1.2 Disability is expensive. Disabled people experience both an income penalty and a cost of living penalty: they are likely to face complex barriers to getting and keeping a job or be unable to work or to work full-time; they have costs that non-disabled people do not.

1.3 Current programmes are failing to sufficiently address these issues. There have been significant reductions in the financial support for disabled people; the delivery of the Work Capability Assessment is causing unnecessary distress to disabled people and unnecessary expense to the state; and programmes to help disabled people fulfil their ambitions to work are ineffective. In mid-2012 it was estimated that around 3.7 million disabled people would lose a total of £28.3 billion of support by 2018 because of the cumulative impact of benefit cuts already announced.

1.4 Against this background, the Labour Party appointed an independent Taskforce:

“To look at ways to break the link between disability and poverty, to review ways of helping disabled people meet the extra costs that disability imposes and to recommend changes to the social security system to maximise disabled people’s control over their own lives. The taskforce will focus on better use of existing resources.”

1.5 We contend that there is currently substantial waste of public money by government, for example on the Work Programme and within the more than £22 billion spent on housing benefit resulting from failures in housing policy. In certain cases, as we outline, better services could be provided at lower cost and the funds reallocated. In other cases, investment in the short-term, for example on Access to Work or an effective employment support programme, would save money in the longer term.

1.6 We believe that any government that is serious about breaking the link between disability and poverty must develop a new agenda, taking account of invest to save principles and the evidence on what works to support people to gain or retain work and to tackle the breadth and depth of disability-related poverty.

1.7 Our recommendations set out the direction in which we believe policy needs to go. Clearly, the speed with which disability poverty is reduced will depend upon the resources devoted to that task

1.8 The Taskforce met from September 2013 to March 2014. All members contributed in a voluntary capacity.

1.9 Our report addresses four areas where we believe action is vital to begin to break the link between disability and poverty:

First, we look at how work could provide a more effective route out of poverty for disabled people and how programmes to support disabled people into employment could function better.

Second, we examine how the current system of social security for disabled people could be more effective, both for those who can and for those who cannot currently work, including the need for reform of the assessment process for disability benefits.

Third, we consider where innovative action could be taken to address the cost-of-living crisis faced by disabled people, including how we could take more action to meet disability specific costs.

Finally, we believe that the poverty faced by disabled people will not be tackled without a renewed commitment to disability equality.

2. Our guiding principles

An adequate standard of living is a human right, as reaffirmed by Article 28 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Poverty undermines the enjoyment of all human rights – people are unable to participate fully, be in control of their lives or enjoy the highest standards of health. Not enjoying other human rights, such as the right to work, study, travel, access goods and services or live independently and be included in the community, increases the risk of a person living in poverty. An effective anti-poverty strategy must be part of a wider disability rights agenda through which disabled people can escape poverty and enjoy equality of opportunity.

Disabled people face both an income penalty, due to the barriers to earning income through paid employment, and a cost of living penalty, due to the extra costs of living with an impairment or long-term health condition, many of which are the result of disabling barriers. Any meaningful measure of poverty and any strategy to address its causes and consequences must address both.

We believe in early action and prevention. Our approach is to invest in what people can do, rather than to solely compensate them for what they can’t do. Such an approach builds people’s resilience to poverty, nurtures their motivation and interests, invests in their capabilities and supports them to develop, participate and contribute.

We believe that it is rational to ‘invest to save’ and that the extent of the cumulative disinvestment in disabled people as a result of public spending cuts by the current government is unsustainable, given the continued rise in the numbers of disabled people. In addition to being a violation of the UK’s obligations to respect, protect and ensure disabled people’s human rights, it is also a false economy: any short term ‘savings’ will result in high costs down the line, for example for the health and social care systems, in unemployment, and in the long-term effects of child poverty. Government should take a long-term approach, prioritising investment for disabled people to participate in and contribute to our society and economy.

Employment can provide a sustainable route out of poverty. With effective support, meaningful opportunities and decent conditions, it is right to invest in the desire of most disabled people to work. To make this aspiration a reality, existing employment support needs to be radically reformed. A major investment is needed in skills and qualifications. Far more must be done to create a more receptive and open labour market and to tackle in-work poverty.

A founding principle of Britain’s welfare state is that people should enjoy an adequate standard of living and a dignified life when they are temporarily, intermittently or permanently prevented from earning income through paid employment for reasons related to illness, injury or impairment. To maintain such a system, a rigorous, fair and effective system of assessing initial and ongoing entitlement is necessary, both to ensure public resources are targeted effectively to achieve desired goals and to maintain public confidence.

Our recommendations

Improving the employment experience of disabled people:

R1. There should be a major skills-drive, actively supported by central government and facilitated by local inclusive growth partnerships to equip disabled people with the skills and qualifications required by the major growth areas in the economy.

R2. Employment programmes demonstrating a clear return on investment should be built upon. In particular, we propose that a model based upon the successful Future Jobs Fund be reintroduced and extended to voluntary participants presently in receipt of Employment and Support Allowance.

R3. The recommendations of the Sayce review concerning Access to Work should be implemented in full, including a significant expansion of funding, passporting money so that it travels from job to job with the person, expanding the scheme to make it more flexible, and ensuring that it responds more quickly and with greater accountability. The scheme should be widely advertised.

R4. The Work Programme and Work Choice should be replaced with a system of personalised in-work employment support. Employers and disabled people should be given the opportunity and power to choose how to spend the budget for disability employment support (including Access to Work funding), with specialist advice as necessary, and that this budget could be used to facilitate access to learning and qualifications in – or linked to – the workplace. This could take the form of on-the-job vocational qualifications, attending a local college, distance learning or accredited, continuous professional development.

R5. Employment support should be better integrated with health, social care and education services.

R6. Employment programmes for disabled people should be commissioned at a more local level and local areas should incorporate plans to improve the employment and qualification rates of disabled people into local growth strategies. They should be led locally by partnerships of local councils, Jobcentre Plus, businesses, education and training providers and disabled people’s organisations, with support from regional growth agencies and nationally by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills.

Improving the social security system for disabled people

R7. The Work Capability Assessment (WCA) should be replaced by a system which is capable of taking account of the full range of factors which determine genuine employment opportunity, including health/impairment, skills, qualifications and the local job market. We believe such an approach will be much more effective at ensuring that appropriate financial and practical support is targeted at the right people. Disabled people and their organisations should be involved in planning and delivering such services.

R8. As a priority, the perverse consequences of explicit or implicit predetermined percentage targets (‘norms’) for numbers passing or failing to qualify for Employment and Support Allowance must be addressed to ensure that people are not denied the support to which they are entitled under the current system.

R9. The transition from sickness in work to claiming out of work benefits should be better managed, over and above the government’s recent reforms. Early action should be taken wherever possible to prevent people from leaving paid employment for reasons related to the onset of impairment or health conditions.

Employers should be encouraged to support employees where possible to return to work, including by offering flexible working. There should be greater exploration of how government can best support those who have recently become ill to receive the best possible medical support sufficiently quickly to prevent them losing touch with the workplace or losing their job, including those suffering from anxiety, depression or other mental health conditions that could become more profound if ignored.

R10. A modern social security system should encourage people with ongoing or fluctuating conditions to try work without fear of prejudicing their income security. Feeling secure in one’s income is an essential part of moving towards work. We believe there should be further exploration of how new flexibilities might be introduced into the benefits and tax credits system and propose that the current permitted work rules are further relaxed.

R11. Decisions about eligibility should be made in a timely fashion; extending the period in which Atos (or a replacement contractor) can obtain further evidence could reduce the number of people inappropriately assessed face to face. GPs should also be offered training to understand the requirements of the evidence-gathering exercise. And financial rewards should be introduced into the system for the correct and timely completion of the form.

R12. There should be a requirement that Jobcentre Plus, the Pension Service and the Disability and Carers Service do much more to ensure that disabled people receive the benefits to which they are entitled.

Addressing the cost of living crisis for disabled people

R13. There should be a detailed investigation of the depth and breadth of poverty experienced by disabled people, which does not use calculations that include Disability Living Allowance (DLA) and Personal Independence Payment (PIP) as income while taking no account of additional disability-related costs.

R14. Government should make renewed efforts to integrate public services, including health and social care.

R15. We welcome Labour’s commitment to abolish the Bedroom Tax, which has a disproportionate impact on disabled people.

R16. Government should invest in accessible and affordable housing and transport.

R17. The Local Housing Allowance should be reviewed as a matter of urgency.

R18. Clear limits should be placed upon the ability of local councils to take account of the PIP in assessing the incomes of disabled people in relation to care charges. The health and social care systems exhibit distinct cultures. We support the greater integration of health and social care but highlight the potential negative implications to independent living should the more medical model of the NHS dominate.

R19. The statistical ‘norms’ that have been identified as influencing the outcomes of the WCA must not be replicated in arrangements for moving claimants from DLA to PIP. An incoming government should commission a full review of both the roll-out of PIP and the mechanisms for ensuring that it is rigorous, objective, accurate and humane. This process should fully engage disabled people and their organisations. Entitlement should be based on assessed need, not rationing.

R20. Government should consider the feasibility of enhancing DLA/PIP by introducing an additional third element designed to contribute towards disability costs not covered by the two current components of either benefit. This should not be taken into account as part of a person’s income when charges are made for public services. We suggest the new three-component benefit be called a Disability Costs Allowance, as this accurately reflects its purpose. It would comprise elements for mobility, care and general costs. Disabled people and their organisations should be involved in the design of the new benefit.

R21. National and local government should use their purchasing power to drive down prices of disability-related equipment and services, including insurance. The value of robust purchasing power is shown in the Motability car scheme, which provides excellent value for money. Government should consult disabled people and their organisations on measures that could be taken to ensure disabled people and the taxpayer receive maximum value for money through the use of public sector purchasing capacity. This need not necessarily involve government doing the purchasing. It could, for example, be a consortium of charities supported by taxpayers’ funds.

R22. Government should revert to the 50-metre distance test in respect of eligibility for the higher rate mobility component of PIP (or any replacement benefit).

A renewed commitment to equality for disabled people

R23. The publicly-funded infrastructure supporting disabled people’s rights inside and outside of government should be the subject of a comprehensive review and reforms need to be implemented to ensure effective coordination, promotion and enforcement of policy, law and best practice (in line with Article 33 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities). This includes the roles of the Equality and Human Rights Commission and the Office for Disability Issues. Restrictions of disabled people’s access to justice, such as the £1200 fee for using an employment tribunal, should be removed.

R24. There should be routine, rigorous and transparent analysis by government departments and public authorities of the likely impact of and opportunities arising from proposed policy and legislation with respect to disability equality. This may be via a renewed commitment to equality impact assessment, including by revising the ‘specific duties’ in regulation related to s149 of the Equality Act 2010, or an improved methodology. Public authorities should in future be required to set out mitigating actions where policy and legislation, including spending decisions, appear to have a likely negative impact on disability equality, as for example the Bedroom Tax proved to do.

R25. There should be investment in creating a sea-change in employer behaviour on recruitment, development and retention of disabled people. This should include the exploration of behavioural insight methodologies such as those developed for ‘Trading for Good’, the linking of positive employment practices to enhanced market position and the consideration of incentives via the tax system, rewarding good practice.

R26. Major public expenditure decisions should only be made after a thorough cost-benefit appraisal. In particular, this should include a full analysis of the future economic and social impact. It clearly does not make sense to fail to invest sufficiently in those areas where future gains outweigh current costs. Similarly, it does not make sense to make public expenditure cuts now where this results in greater costs in the future.

R27. There should be local inclusive growth strategies which bring together economic regeneration, support for business, job creation, and skills and employment support for disabled people. They should be led locally by partnerships of local councils, Jobcentre Plus, businesses, education and training providers and disabled people’s organisations, with support from regional growth agencies and nationally by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills.

R28. Policies and services should be co-produced with disabled people’s organisations.

Understanding disability-related poverty

What is disability?

The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, which the last government ratified in June 2009, states that disability “results from the interaction between persons with impairments and attitudinal and environmental barriers that hinders their full and effective participation in society on an equal basis with others”.

This ‘social model’ of disability (See Appendix 1), developed by the disabled people’s movement, has long-standing status in Britain and has underpinned much of the progress made to secure the inclusion and well-being of disabled people over the past 20 years. It underpins our analysis and recommendations.

However, estimates of the number of the population with a ‘disability’, including those used throughout this report, usually take the approach of looking solely at medical or functional criteria. We discuss the limitations of this approach in Appendix 1.

How many ‘disabled people’ are there in Britain?

The Office for Disability Issues estimates for the purposes of the Equality Act 2010 that there are 11.6 million disabled people in Britain, of whom 5.7 million are adults of working age, 5.1 million are over state pension age and 0.8 million are children. This represents 19 per cent of the population – a similar level to Australia, Canada and the USA.

Only around 2-3 per cent of disabled people are born with their impairment or health condition. Some will acquire or be diagnosed with impairments or health conditions in childhood. Most acquire them later in life (for example, of disabled people over state pension age, 79 per cent reported that they acquired their impairment or health condition after the age of 50 and 47 per cent after the age of 65). Given that the population is ageing – in particular a rapid expansion among the over-85 age group – we can therefore anticipate a corresponding rise in the incidence of those covered by the Equality Act 2010.

The proportion of the population that can be considered ‘disabled’ varies significantly by region. It is higher in Wales (24 per cent) and Northern England (20-23 per cent) than in London (14 per cent) and the South East (16 per cent). The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) concludes that: “Regional differences may reflect the changes in industry in Wales and Northern England resulting in a cohort effect as prevalence in those areas is higher amongst those aged 55 or over when compared to London and the South East”.

What do we mean by disability-related poverty?

It has long been recognised that households with disabled members are more likely to live in poverty than other households. Similarly, it is also widely acknowledged that disabled people face additional costs of living.

Some extra costs relate specifically to disability – for example for stairlifts, scooters, wheelchairs, specialist clothing or sign language interpretation. Such costs are hugely varied, but significant. Others are costs of living faced by everyone that are higher for disabled people because they are disabled. For example, a disabled person may spend more on heating if they spend more time at home and are less mobile than other people. They may pay more for food because of a special diet, more for laundry because of incontinence or more for transport because they can only use accessible taxis to get around.

Disability-related poverty is the result of both low incomes and additional costs of living or, to use the distinction employed by Nobel Laureate economist Amartya Sen, disabled people face both an income penalty and a cost of living penalty. Sen cites evidence that “of the . . . poverty disadvantage for individuals living in families with a disabled member, only about a sixth can be attributed to income.” This means that the other five-sixths – arising from the extra costs of living – is of far greater importance.

The term ‘disability-related poverty’ includes all of those affected, by being family members or dependants of ‘disabled people living in poverty’, most notably large numbers of children. Addressing these extra costs must therefore be central to any anti-poverty strategy, and action must extend to those both in and out of work.

Measurement of disability-related poverty

There are different methodological approaches for measuring the extra costs of disability. However, there is general agreement about the existence of such extra costs and that these are significant.

Benefits such as Disability Living Allowance (DLA) exist explicitly to contribute to covering some of the extra costs faced by disabled people. However, the official income poverty calculation does not take account of these outgoings, and even more problematically includes DLA as income without taking into account the related expenditure.

As a consequence, the most commonly used statistics about income poverty seriously underestimate the levels of income poverty experienced by disabled people and their families.

The Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF) concludes that “The effect of removing DLA and [Attendance Allowance] from incomes is to double the number of people in poverty who receive these benefits. For children, the number rises to 390,000 from 240,000. For working-age adults there is an increase from 730,000 to 1,300,000. The largest proportional increase is for pensioners, where the number in poverty trebles, from 180,000 to 560,000.”

When addressing the links between disability and poverty, it is important to recognise that these conditions can be mutually reinforcing. People experiencing poverty and socio-economic disadvantage are more likely to develop impairments or long-term health conditions earlier in their lives. Using the standard measures of income, for children in the most socio-economically disadvantaged households in 1991, the likelihood of developing disabling chronic health conditions by 2001 was more than twice that of children in the least disadvantaged households. And those in the bottom fifth of the income distribution face a risk of becoming disabled two and a half times as high as those in the top fifth.”

Moreover, experience of socio-economic disadvantage in early childhood can increase the likelihood of developing a health condition in later childhood.

Conversely, people with impairments or long-term health conditions are more likely to experience poverty and socio-economic disadvantage, using the standard poverty measure:

  • People living in families with a disabled member make up one in three of all people living in income poverty.
  • Around a quarter of all children living in poverty live in a household where at least one adult is disabled.
  • Disabled adults are twice as likely as non-disabled adults to live in persistent poverty, defined as spending three or more years in any four-year period in poverty.

4.18 Disabled people’s financial status also makes them disproportionately vulnerable to financial exclusion and exploitation that can further erode their capacity to escape poverty:

  • Twenty-seven per cent of households where at least one person has an impairment report that they find making loan repayments a heavy burden (compared with 14 per cent of households where no one has an impairment).
  • One in four people with a mental health condition also has debt problems which can seriously affect their well-being. Improving understanding and management of money matters can make a difference; moving from low to average financial capability improves psychological well-being by 6 per cent and reduces risk of anxiety/depression by 15 per cent.
  • Disabled people are three times more likely to draw on doorstep loans. A fifth have been unable to make the minimum payment on their credit card in the past year.
  • Disabled people are less likely to have a current account and almost one in ten have been turned down for insurance, with 22 per cent believing their impairment drives up their premiums.

Improving the employment experience of disabled people

The problem

Disabled people in the UK face a significant employment penalty. In 2012, 46 per cent of working age disabled people were in employment, compared to 76 per cent of working age non-disabled people, a thirty percentage point gap. While the gap reduced by around nine percentage points between 1997 and 2010, many more disabled people who could see their incomes boosted by employment are missing out, and around 30 to 40 per cent of disabled people currently not in employment say that they want to work.

The employment rate of disabled people in the UK is also lower than in many other European countries, with Sweden, Iceland, Estonia, Switzerland, Denmark and Germany all achieving disability employment rates above 50 per cent.

The headline figures hide wide variations in disability employment rates, both by condition and by age. The employment rate for those with mental health conditions is just 37 per cent. While the employment rate for disabled people aged 50 and over increased from 35 per cent in 2001 to 41 per cent in 2012, employment rates for young disabled people over the same period have fallen, reflecting the sharp overall rise in youth unemployment.

While many disabled people cannot work, and work is not always a secure route out of poverty, it is clear that increasing the employment opportunities for disabled people must be a key part of the strategy to break the link between disability and poverty.

Reasons driving the lower rate of employment for disabled people include employer discrimination and unfair treatment at work and a lack of focus on improving the qualifications and skills of disabled people:

Despite the existence of the Equality Act 2010 and the Disability Discrimination Act before that, there is strong evidence that disabled people face discrimination both in hiring practices, and when at work. Richard Berthoud has calculated a ‘disability employment penalty’ of 28 per cent, a measure of “the difference between the actual proportion of disabled people in work, and what the proportion would have been if those same people were not disabled, but all their other characteristics (gender, education and so on) remained the same.”

Disabled people, and those with a long-standing health condition, are more than twice as likely as non-disabled people to experience unfair treatment at work, including bullying, harassment and discrimination.

There is a two-way relationship between skills acquisition and disability; disability results in some people acquiring fewer qualifications, but early educational disadvantage also makes it more likely that people will become disabled in later life. Disabled people are twice as likely as non-disabled people to have no qualifications, and a third less likely to have qualifications above level four – degree level.

Those disabled people who have qualifications are significantly more likely to be employed; the employment rate gap between disabled and non-disabled people with no qualifications is 35 percentage points, compared to 15 percentage points for those with a degree. Disabled people’s lack of skills also leaves them trapped in lower paid occupations, and the employment rate gap is significantly lower in clerical jobs (especially in the public sector), nursing and social care, shop and sales work, and cleaning.

5.6 Other barriers to employment cited by disabled people include a lack of job opportunities, family responsibilities, and access problems, with 31 per cent of unemployed disabled people citing transport as a barrier to work.

5.7 Moreover, disabled people in work suffer a pay penalty:

Disabled people are more likely to have low-paid, low-status jobs which may not lift them out of poverty. The employment rate gap is especially marked in senior management, the professions (including medicine), construction trades, engineering and IT, the arts and media, food, and hospitality. It is less wide in clerical jobs (especially in the public sector), nursing and social care, shop and sales work, and cleaning.

Research conducted by the Equality and Human Rights Commission found that disabled men experience a pay gap of 11 per cent when compared to non-disabled men, and disabled women’s average full-time pay was found to be just 78 per cent of non-disabled women’s.

Current policies and programmes

5.8 In a report for the Disability Rights Commission in 2007, the Social Market Foundation calculated, using the methodology of the Leitch Review that, having taken costs into account: “Improving the employment rate of disabled people to the national average would boost the UK economy by £13 billion, equivalent to six months’ economic growth. Improving the skills of disabled people to world leading levels by 2020 would give a boost equivalent to 18 extra months of growth over 30 years, some £35 billion.” But the employment of disabled people clearly has benefits that go beyond economic benefits both for the individuals involved and to wider society.

5.9 In his report to the DWP in 2007, David Freud (now Lord Freud, the Minister for Welfare Reform), also emphasised the fiscal benefits of employment and estimated that the gain to the Exchequer from the average Incapacity Benefit recipient moving into work would be £9,000. This arises from savings in benefit and tax credit payments, together with increased direct and indirect tax revenue. The argument for spending now when future gains outweigh the costs is sound economics.

5.10 However, unfortunately, current policies and programmes are based upon an assumption of unemployment as the result of individual failure – either of innate capacity for work or simply the will to do so. Policy-makers pay insufficient attention to the barriers to work disabled people face, including the capacity and willingness of employers to employ and support them, and the availability of jobs.

5.11 This in turn reinforces negative public discourses about disabled people – unlikely to make employers more willing to offer jobs. Public policy should focus on the availability of jobs and on the major barriers to employment for disabled people: the inclusivity of workplaces and the accessibility of services.

5.12 Employment rates for disabled people rose significantly under the last government, and there is some evidence that the Disability Discrimination Act, updated in 2005, may have helped protect disabled employees during the recession, although as discussed in chapter 8, we believe that ground has been lost since then and that there is further to go to protect and promote equality for disabled people. There are now increased barriers for disabled people who want to challenge discrimination – including the introduction of a £1200 employment tribunal fee and cuts to the capacity (powers, people, money) of the Equality and Human Rights Commission.

5.13 Programmes that aim to help disabled people to improve their skills and access employment are failing badly. The Work Programme, which runs mandatory employment activity for people claiming Employment and Support Allowance (ESA), set a modest performance target: 16.5 per cent of people on ESA should secure sustained employment through the programme. But figures published in December 2013 show that only 5 per cent of new ESA claimants have secured employment through the Work Programme (a 95 per cent failure rate), and the figures for existing ESA claimants are even worse.

5.14 The most optimistic projections suggest this might rise to 12 per cent as the most recent recruits go the full course of the programme (a failure rate, at best, of 88 per cent). An evaluation of the programme, leaked to Channel 4 News, found that “participants with health conditions and disabilities … [were] being seen less often and being offered less support than other groups” and that “the differential payment system … was unlikely to have mitigated creaming and parking” – in other words, Work Programme providers are still doing least to help those with the most barriers to work.

5.15 In part, the failure of the Work Programme may reflect a lack of focus on improving skills among disabled people. The UK Commission for Employment and Skills found that: “There is a continuing under-emphasis on skills development for disabled people in employment programmes. This reinforces rather than compensates for the ‘double disadvantage’ that disabled people experience through low participation rates in formal education. Disabled people’s participation in government-funded further education and skills provision (including apprenticeship) has improved, but they remain underrepresented.”

5.16 Work Choice, a voluntary programme set up for those disabled people facing the greatest barriers to employment, has slightly better results than the Work Programme, with around 30 per cent of participants securing employment. However, a recent evaluation commissioned by the DWP shows that it is not serving the very people it was set up for – those with the most complex needs. Since 2011/12 it has helped only 58 people with serious mental health problems per year (on average) to get jobs in the whole of Great Britain. A London NHS trust helped almost four times as many people (201) with serious mental health problems to get jobs, in the same amount of time.

5.17 One successful employment programme was the Future Jobs Fund, introduced in 2009 in response to the increase in long-term unemployment following the financial crisis of 2008. A crucial feature of this programme is that it was based on job guarantees for six months. National organisations and sectoral and local partnerships were invited to bid for funds to create jobs. When the DWP published its analysis of the impact of this scheme, it concluded that participants were much more likely to be in work and off Jobseeker’s Allowance than non-participants, long after the programme ended. And the cost-benefit analysis showed that the Future Jobs Fund, in addition to creating employment opportunities, resulted in a net economic benefit of £7,750 per participant.

5.18 Most successful is the Access to Work programme, which helps those with a disability or long-standing illness to gain or retain work, by helping with the cost of equipment or adjustments made over and above those required by the Equality Act.

5.19 This has a long and well-documented record as a successful employment support programme and received “overwhelming support” from a variety of stakeholders consulted for the Sayce review of disability employment support. Access to Work also generates more income for the Treasury than it costs to run. Research by the DWP shows that, for every £1 spent on the Access to Work programme, the net return to the Treasury through higher tax revenue and lower benefit payments is £1.48. The social return, after taking into account other savings, such as healthcare costs, is even greater. Despite this, Access to Work’s annual budget accounts for a tiny fraction of DWP’s annual expenditure of £150 billion.

5.20 Research shows that the most effective forms of employment support for disabled people involve:

Individual support, including a personalised employment plan, such as those used in individual placement and support programmes, which help people facing significant barriers to work to find and keep a job.
Giving greater control of budgets to disabled people and employers, who understand best what successful workplaces for disabled people look like.
Securing in-work development opportunities with effective incentives for employers to participate.

UKCES has concluded: “Given the evidence that employer attitudes and behaviour are positively influenced by experience of employing disabled people, government schemes and their providers should put particular emphasis on placing disabled people with employers (including SMEs) with less prior experience of disability, and providing post-placement support.”

5.21 At present only some of the money currently spent on employment programmes is spent in a way that is proven to work. When money is spent on employment support that works, it costs less and supports more people to get or keep work. In these cases, the size of the provider of support does not matter. The level of impairment someone has does not affect whether they can get or keep work, or how much it costs to support them.

5.22 At present, the government’s record represents poor stewardship of existing resources and a failure to harness new ones. We believe that intervening early, integrating and personalising services around individuals and providing people with greater control over their support, provides opportunities to vastly improve the use of scarce public resources and to secure far greater returns on investment.

Our recommendations

R1. There should be a major skills-drive, actively supported by central government and facilitated by local inclusive growth partnerships to equip disabled people with the skills and qualifications required by the major growth areas in the economy.

R2. Employment programmes demonstrating a clear return on investment should be built upon. In particular, we propose that a model based upon the successful Future Jobs Fund be reintroduced and extended to voluntary participants presently in receipt of Employment and Support Allowance.

R3. The recommendations of the Sayce review concerning Access to Work should be implemented in full, including a significant expansion of funding, passporting money so that it travels from job to job with the person, expanding the scheme to make it more flexible, and ensuring that it responds more quickly and with greater accountability. The scheme should be widely advertised.

R4. The Work Programme and Work Choice should be replaced with a system of personalised in-work employment support. Employers and disabled people should be given the opportunity and power to choose how to spend the budget for disability employment support (including Access to Work funding), with specialist advice as necessary, and that this budget could be used to facilitate access to learning and qualifications in – or linked to – the workplace. This could take the form of on-the-job vocational qualifications, attending a local college, distance learning or accredited, continuous professional development.

R5. Employment support should be better integrated with health, social care and education services.

R6. Employment programmes for disabled people should be commissioned at a more local level and local areas should incorporate plans to improve the employment and qualification rates of disabled people into local growth strategies. They should be led locally by partnerships of local councils, Jobcentre Plus, businesses, education and training providers and disabled people’s organisations, with support from regional growth agencies and nationally by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills.

Improving the social security system for disabled people

The problem

The effects of some people’s impairment or health condition – such as nausea, breathing difficulties, limited energy, dizziness, distress, confusion or pain – can make paid employment temporarily, intermittently or permanently unreasonably difficult or impossible. While we all have the right to an adequate standard of living, the current assessment of entitlement for Employment and Support Allowance is failing to direct the right support to the people who need it, making people vulnerable and placing their health and well-being at risk. It amounts to a scandalous misuse of public resources. Replacing the private contractor that currently carries out the assessments will not fix a problem designed by government. The approach requires fundamental reform.

Social security plays a vital part in helping to secure the living standards of disabled people, with those who are in receipt of a disability benefit half as likely to be in poverty than those who are not (14 per cent, compared to 28 per cent), albeit that these statistics take no account of additional disability-related costs.

There are two main types of benefit for disabled people; Employment and Support Allowance (ESA), which is intended to replace employment income for those currently or permanently unable to work, and Disability Living Allowance (DLA) – in the process of being transformed into the Personal Independence Payment (PIP), which is intended to meet the extra costs associated with disability. ESA is an out-of-work benefit, with both contributory and means-tested elements, whereas DLA and PIP are available to people both in and out of work, are not means tested and not based on your contribution conditions. For details of these and other disability benefits, see Appendix 2.

In this section, we focus on the way that disability benefits are assessed, which we believe is leading to undue hardship and distress for too many disabled people. The Work Capability Assessment (WCA), used to assess entitlement for ESA, is not fit for purpose, and, we believe, in need of urgent reform. In the subsequent section, we examine how disability benefits could better help address the costs of disability.

Our remit within this report was to look at ways to break the link between disability and poverty. The sustained level of cuts to disability benefits and other types of support has significantly reduced disabled people’s standard of living and ability to participate in society. As yet, no official cumulative impact assessment of the reductions in support for disability benefits has been undertaken. This is an urgent first step towards an assessment of the true costs of these changes and to confirming an effective way to break the link between disability and poverty.

Current programmes

From the earliest days of the welfare state, successive governments have appreciated that some people of working age are unable to work because of impairments and long-term health conditions. As Appendix 2 shows, specific benefits were successively introduced to support such people and these have evolved into ESA.

The coalition government inherited plans for people on Incapacity Benefit to be reassessed for eligibility for the new benefit, ESA, but it has made further, harsher changes. The current assessment system, the WCA, attempts to assess whether someone is employable solely on the basis of their impairment or health condition. It deliberately ignores other factors such as skills and local availability of suitable jobs.

The reasons why people are classified as unemployable are more complex than just their impairment or health condition but this simplistic rationale lies at the core of the WCA. It seeks to separate social, cultural or ‘real world’ reasons from an impairment or health condition in deciding whether a person is employable. The reasons why people are classified as unemployable are more complex than just the type or severity of their impairment or health condition – but the WCA does not reflect this.

The objective of the WCA is to decide whether a person is (1) employable and may therefore be entitled to Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA); (2) capable of work-related activity with support and can therefore be placed in the ESA ‘work-related activity group’; or (3) not capable of any work-related activity and can therefore be placed in the ESA ‘support group’.

The WCA has been criticised for assessing people as capable of work when they were clearly incapable. We believe that the structure within which the WCA operates makes inaccurate assessments inevitable. There are several reasons for this.

Atos is the company awarded the contract to undertake the WCA on behalf of the DWP, which sets the parameters for the test. Its contract is fulfilled by meeting the DWP’s objectives. The objective of the assessment framework is not to enable disabled people to work, but to reduce benefit expenditure by finding more people fit for work or able to do work-related activity, which will reduce the amount of money for which they are eligible.

At the least, this expectation creates implicit pressure on Atos, a business which must win and retain contracts, to ensure that a given proportion of people fail to qualify for ESA. Whether there is more overt pressure is subject to debate – but when people appeal a WCA decision, 38 per cent win their appeal.

Such an inefficient system inevitably causes great distress to those who are subject to it. The DWP has argued that each person is judged individually against objective criteria. However, recent research by Franklin casts doubt on this. She argues that Atos is working to clear outcome targets, intended to limit the proportion of successful claims and that the DWP has determined how many people it wishes to move off ESA as part of its policy to reduce social security expenditure.

Franklin argues that a policy of ‘norms’ operates so that a predetermined number of people must be assessed as failing to qualify for ESA. Inevitably, this means that a given individual might be assessed one week as qualifying for ESA, but if the same individual had applied a week earlier or later they might not have qualified. This does not imply that all the assessments undertaken by Atos are inaccurate but it might help to explain why very many are – as confirmed by the number of successful appeals.

In addition to the use of ‘norms’, there are two other fundamental faults within the WCA that inhibit a fair and accurate process: the ‘descriptors’ used and problems with further medical evidence collection.

The descriptors framework is set by the DWP. Descriptors are intended to assess function for work-related activity in a medical sense and ignore non-medical factors. They are in practice so basic as to be absurd. For example, whilst the ability to move an imaginary cardboard box may theoretically provide some insight about an individual’s ability to carry out repeat functions with their limbs, it bears no relation to the kind of employment available. There are also particular concerns about the descriptors framework’s unsuitability for those with fluctuating conditions, mental health conditions and learning disabilities.

A recommendation to examine the descriptors was made in the second government-commissioned ‘Harrington review’ and the results were published December 2013: We believe the current descriptors lead to inaccurate conclusions.

The collection of further medical evidence by Atos causes more problems. Atos must obtain, analyse and assess medical evidence from ESA113 forms within two weeks. The primary source for ESA113 evidence is the claimant’s GP. GPs are extremely busy and often unable to complete the ESA113 within the required timeframe. This means that many claimants are called for face-to-face WCA assessments unnecessarily, as the supporting evidence from their GP arrives after that two-week time limit.

Although it is important to make decisions about eligibility in a timely fashion, extending the period in which Atos (or a replacement contractor) can obtain further evidence could reduce the number of people inappropriately assessed at Atos centres. This procedure also creates difficulties for people who do not have a named GP or who have not seen them for many years.

GPs also lack understanding of the type of information required by the ESA113, as disability analysis has a very different focus from general practice. Two simple ways to improve the collection of further medical evidence would be to provide online training for all GPs to help them to understand how to complete ESA113 and to pay GPs properly for correctly and promptly filling out the form.

It is unlikely that any individual medical practitioner is sufficiently qualified to make an assessment of whether someone can work, given the wide range of impairments and health conditions and their impact.

Few Atos staff have occupational health experience. Even if they had sufficient skills to make such assessments accurately, they could still tell us very little about whether people are employable or unemployable. Two blind people might have the same impairment but would have very different employment prospects depending on when they became blind, how experienced they are in living with blindness, their skills, where they live and their employment experience.

The objective of the WCA is to place disabled people into one of three categories (see paragraph 6.9 above), including the work-related activity group (WRAG). ESA is designed for people assessed as being incapable of work. As people’s health can fluctuate, people assessed as unemployable are likely from time to time to face a reassessment to confirm or amend the original assessment.

The WRAG category is for people who are judged able to do some work, if given the right support. They are under an obligation to participate in work-related activity and to show that they are doing so. Initially this group was cautiously welcomed by disabled people who wanted support to work. But the introduction of time limits and sanctions has created such fear and insecurity amongst those in the WRAG that it often pushes them further away from the workplace.

The total number of sanctions against benefit claimants in the year to September 2013 was 897,690. The number of JSA sanctions in the year to 30 September 2013 was 874,850, the highest since JSA was introduced in 1996. It compares with 500,000 in the year to 30 April 2010, the last month of the previous Labour government.

In the year to 30 September 2013 there were also 22,840 sanctions imposed on ESA claimants in the WRAG. This is the highest for any 12-month period since sanctions were introduced for such claimants in October 2008.

The Welfare Reform Act 2012 imposed a 12-month time limit for payment of contributory ESA for those in the WRAG; the income-related element is not subject to a time limit. This means that an individual’s impairment can remain just as severe as it was when they were first placed in the WRAG but if they have savings of more than £16,000 or a partner in full-time work, their ESA stops after 12 months.

Harsh financial sanctions are simply not appropriate for any person meeting the qualifying level of sickness or disability required to be entitled to WRAG or ESA – a system that is currently all stick and no carrot.

The WRAG was originally envisaged by Professor Paul Gregg as a place of support and safety, in which those who needed support to work would receive it for as long as necessary until they were on a pathway to work-related activity. Professor Gregg believed that most people would remain in this group for between two and five years as they gained the skills and experience necessary to move towards the workplace.

Disabled people’s organisations have been at the forefront of arguing that most disabled people want to work. What is lacking is an effective and efficient assessment system to determine whether people are capable of working, what type of work they could do, what support they need, and whether opportunities exist where they live.

Our recommendations

R7. The Work Capability Assessment (WCA) should be replaced by a system which is capable of taking account of the full range of factors which determine genuine employment opportunity, including health/impairment, skills, qualifications and the local job market. We believe such an approach will be much more effective at ensuring that appropriate financial and practical support is targeted at the right people. Disabled people and their organisations should be involved in planning and delivering such services.

R8. As a priority, the perverse consequences of explicit or implicit predetermined percentage targets (‘norms’) for numbers passing or failing to qualify for Employment and Support Allowance must be addressed to ensure that people are not denied the support to which they are entitled under the current system.

R9. The transition from sickness in work to claiming out of work benefits should be better managed, over and above the government’s recent reforms. Early action should be taken wherever possible to prevent people from leaving paid employment for reasons related to the onset of impairment or health conditions. Employers should be encouraged to support employees where possible to return to work, including by offering flexible working. There should be greater exploration of how government can best support those who have recently become ill to receive the best possible medical support sufficiently quickly to prevent them losing touch with the workplace or losing their job, including those suffering from anxiety, depression or other mental health conditions that could become more profound if ignored.

R10. A modern social security system should encourage people with ongoing or fluctuating conditions to try work without fear of prejudicing their income security. Feeling secure in one’s income is an essential part of moving towards work. We believe there should be further exploration of how new flexibilities might be introduced into the benefits and tax credits system and propose that the current permitted work rules are further relaxed.

R11. Decisions about eligibility should be made in a timely fashion; extending the period in which Atos (or a replacement contractor) can obtain further evidence could reduce the number of people inappropriately assessed face to face. GPs should also be offered training to understand the requirements of the evidence-gathering exercise. And financial rewards should be introduced into the system for the correct and timely completion of the form.

R12. There should be a requirement that Jobcentre Plus, the Pension Service and the Disability and Carers Service do much more to ensure that disabled people receive the benefits to which they are entitled.

7. Addressing the cost of living crisis for disabled people

The problem

7.1 As we set out in chapter 4, it is widely acknowledged that disabled people face additional living costs relating to their impairment, and that the challenge of meeting these costs can push disabled people into poverty.

7.2 Each disabled person will not have just one set of extra costs, but several. These additional costs can arise regardless of whether people are in employment, and employment itself can often bring extra costs for disabled people. Disability Rights UK recently concluded that the extra costs of work are usually in the range of £3,900 to £4,900 a year.

7.3 In addition to meeting costs related to their impairment, disabled people have been affected by the rapid price rises in utilities and transport. For example, the cost of heating may be higher for people who are sedentary or immobile due to their impairment and who spend most if not all of their time at home. Fuel prices have increased by £300 since 2010, and over the last decade the costs of personal transport have increased by 71 per cent and public transport by 87 per cent. All far exceed the increase in the consumer price index of 29 per cent over the last decade. However, unlike the universal winter fuel allowance for the over 65s, there is no specific help with these costs for younger disabled people.

7.4 As well as utilities and transport, many people in poverty pay significantly more for essential goods and services than do those on higher incomes. For example, it is much more difficult for many people to shop around for better deals because of limited internet access. And those who are unable to buy household equipment outright have to pay in instalments or take out a loan, ‘payday’ or otherwise, further increasing the cost. This ‘poverty premium’ was estimated in 2010 by Save the Children to be £1,280 a year for a typical low-income family.

7.5 Housing represents a very substantial cost for most people. Disabled people may need to buy or rent larger properties to accommodate equipment, provide circulation space for a wheelchair or to house a carer. Accessible and affordable housing is in very short supply, restricting people’s ability to secure a decent home and their ability to move.

7.6 Disabled people living in social housing have been disproportionately affected by the Bedroom Tax. The Government’s own impact estimate shows that two thirds of those affected, an estimated 400,000 people, have a disability. Disabled people living in private rented accommodation are also likely to have been affected disproportionately by reductions to Housing Benefit: 51 per cent of those claiming Housing Benefit in the private rented sector report having a disability under the DDA, compared to 41 per cent of the total population.

7.7 Disabled people’s meagre incomes are often used to pay for health and social care services – whether it is physiotherapy or other therapies that are not available on the NHS or support for their personal care needs.

7.8 These costs – and the fact that the most commonly used statistics take no account of them while counting Disability Living Allowance (DLA) or Personal Independence Payment (PIP) as income, mean that there are almost certainly more people living in poverty and more people facing extreme poverty than official figures record.

Current programmes and policies:

7.9 Housing represents a huge cost for most people. Current expenditure on housing benefit is almost £22 billion per year. This is used to subsidise rents in the public and private sector but has not encouraged the building of new homes.

7.10 Until the 1980s government policy was to subsidise the building of social housing by providing funds to local authorities and housing associations. This changed following the passing of the Housing Act 1988 and the Local Government and Housing Act 1989. These two pieces of legislation moved state funding from supporting the building of social housing to subsidising rents, which were allowed to rise.

7.11 One result of this policy was that housing associations and local authorities were required to fund a large portion of their building cost through revenue, borrowing or both. Between 1979/80 and 1996/7 the percentage of the government’s housing budget spent on housing benefit rose from 12 per cent to 69 per cent. Rents rose and social housing became more costly for people who then needed to claim Housing Benefit. Private landlords entered the market and needed rents that were commercial. Again, state support was needed for tenants.

7.12 The result has been decades of rising Housing Benefit and a continuing shortage of social housing. The Spare Bedroom Subsidy or Bedroom Tax is part of the government’s policy to reduce Housing Benefit expenditure but it has hit disabled people particularly harshly.

7.13 In 2008 the Labour government introduced a Local Housing Allowance (LHA) for tenants renting in the private sector. Initially LHA was set at the 50th centile of average local rent. However, the Coalition government reduced the rate of LHA payable to the 30th centile. This means that private rental sector tenants can only afford to rent from the cheapest third of properties in their local area. Private rents frequently far exceed the LHA rates, particularly in areas like the south east.

7.14 Whereas there has been a great deal of concern about the Bedroom Tax, tenants in the private rental sector claiming LHA often have far greater financial shortfalls between the LHA rate and the available rent. In many areas that can mean the tenant having to find an additional £100+ per month to pay their landlord, more punishing financially than the Bedroom Tax but currently with no solution.

7.15 Disabled people frequently use their DLA to top up their rent shortfalls – the full rent whether paid by LHA or from other benefits the tenant receives is paid to the landlord, meaning there is no wider public benefit in terms of investment or improvements to available housing.

7.16 This is a particular problem for those disabled people not able to qualify for social housing. Private rental sector housing is not usually accessible and landlords are generally reluctant to make adaptations to their own properties. This is reflected by the attitude of local authorities who often require tenants to prove they are likely to live in their property for five years before they will grant a Disabled Facilities Grant for adaptations.

7.17 We have discussed the history of housing policy at some length to illustrate that a significant amount of public money could achieve better outcomes if it was spent in building affordable houses rather than subsidising high rents. Disabled people are disproportionately represented in the social housing sector.  They have borne the brunt of cuts in Housing Benefit. The Bedroom Tax has hit disabled people particularly harshly and has caused unnecessary distress. Current housing policy is becoming a major factor in reducing the living standards of disabled people.

7.18 Housing is not the only major policy area where needless costs are borne not just by disabled people but by the taxpayer. In his speech to last year’s Labour Party Conference, Ed Miliband gave an example of where spending today saves money tomorrow: “Just putting a £50 grab rail in the home stops somebody falling over, prevents them ending up in hospital with the needless agony, and all of the money that it costs.”

7.19 The response of various governments to meeting the extra costs of disability has taken two major forms.

7.20 The first is the provision of social security benefits, and in particular what began as Mobility Allowance and Attendance Allowance (see Appendix 2), now components of DLA. They are intended to contribute towards the costs disabled people incur as a consequence of their impairment or health condition which are not incurred by people who are not disabled. These are available to those both in and out of work.

7.21 The present government has cut support for disability-related extra costs through the replacement of DLA with PIP. PIP has a different set of eligibility criteria, a requirement for greater face-to-face assessment, and an expectation that spending will be lower than that on DLA by around 20 per cent. The criteria for PIP include the entirely arbitrary decision to reduce the distance a person should be able to walk to qualify for the enhanced rate of the mobility component of PIP from 50 metres to 20 metres, with serious knock-on effects.

Only people who qualify for the enhanced rate are entitled to lease a vehicle through the Motability scheme. The government estimates that of those on DLA being reassessed for PIP, 160,000 people will have their benefits cut and 170,000 people will receive no benefit at all by October 2015.

7.22 The Mobility Allowance was originally introduced in 1975 to contribute towards the extra costs of a disabled person’s mobility, and two years later the charity Motability was created to help disabled people to exchange their allowance for the lease of a car.

7.23 One third of people who receive the higher rate of the mobility component of DLA, and as a consequence are entitled to use the Motability scheme, choose to do so. To obtain a vehicle from Motability, you agree that for the length of the lease, usually three years, your DLA mobility component will be paid by the DWP directly to Motability. This means that although the person will have a car that is maintained and insured by Motability, all of their mobility component will have been surrendered and cannot be used to meet other disability-related costs.

7.24 Reductions in social care funding are also impacting on disabled people’s ability to meet their other living costs. When Attendance Allowance was introduced it was not intended solely to meet the cost of someone’s personal care. It was a proxy allowance to contribute towards a huge variety of disability-related costs that were not related to mobility, such as cleaning, laundry and other domestic help, clothing, special dietary requirements and communication.

7.25 In the 1970s, very few local authorities means tested personal care support such as help with getting up, bathing, using the lavatory, dressing or eating, and the Attendance Allowance for those who needed that help could be used to contribute towards other disability-related costs. In the 1980s, local authorities began to consider Attendance Allowance as income that could be claimed towards the cost of local authority support for the disabled person’s personal care needs. It has come to be seen as a contribution towards specific care needs rather than as a proxy for a variety of disability-related costs. Social care is means tested and local authorities take the Attendance Allowance into account. As a result a growing number of disabled people receive no support for disability-related costs.

7.26 The announcement in the 2014 Budget that people would be able to cash in their annuities or pensions could result in the further impoverishment of disabled people. At the moment the capital sum in pensions is excluded from means testing for social care support. If, in future, people can realise the capital sums in their pension schemes, it is likely that local authorities will require people to do so and to draw down the entire pension until the capital is lower than £23,000. Not only will this mean that people must spend the capital but also no income will be gained from it. This will force people to depend on state benefits rather than having an additional income from a pension for which they had saved all their lives.

7.27 Within the existing system, many disabled people may lose out on benefits to which they are entitled due to long-standing problems with take-up. Since 1997 the UK has regularly produced official estimates of take-up rates for income-related benefits. These show a significant and rising problem of non-take-up: “Of the estimated £10 billion of unclaimed income-related benefits in 2009/10 . . . unclaimed amounts of means-tested working-age benefits (i.e. income support, income-related JSA and ESA) made up the largest group at 30 per cent, followed by pension credit accounting for 24 per cent.”

Less accurate estimates are available for take-up rates for non-income-related benefits such as DLA (ranging between 40 and 60 per cent in the case of Attendance Allowance, between 30 and 50 per cent in the case of the DLA care component and between 50 and 70 per cent in the case of the DLA mobility component) and Carer’s Allowance (65 per cent).

7.28 The second way in which the government helps meet disability-related costs, is to reduce the price of goods and services, either by offering discounts or price reductions to disabled people, or to collectively purchase provision that is then available to disabled people. Examples of price reduction strategies include VAT relief on the price of disability equipment or, exemption from Vehicle Excise Duty for some disabled motorists in addition to receiving DLA.

Wheelchair users and some other disabled people also receive a reduction in Council Tax because of the extra space they require, and Housing Benefit provides support to disabled people with the costs of housing. Examples of collective purchasing include local authority provided social care, the collective purchase of vehicles through the Motability scheme, and in some areas, the collective purchase of community equipment.

7.29 Disability equipment and assistive technology play an increasingly important role in the lives of disabled people. Yet increasingly, disabled people are expected to purchase the aids and adaptations they need, which can be very expensive: For example, someone who became unable to walk could need a stair-lift (a second hand one could cost £5000), an indoor power wheelchair (£1000), a scooter for travel outside the home (£800), a bathing seat (£400), a dropped kerb outside their house (£1000), plus major renovations to their home.

7.30 An individual consumer has very little bargaining power in the marketplace and, whilst most retailers are honourable, others are less so. Although such equipment might be exempt from VAT it remains very expensive. The government has promoted the ‘retail model’ as the way to reduce expenditure on equipment – the idea that pressure from consumers and ‘what the market will bear’ will bring prices down.

7.31 Following the Dilnot report on funding elderly care and the review of palliative care, government should be starting to look more seriously at community equipment in terms of the important role it can provide in supporting care related services. Public sector community equipment services issue approximately 9 million pieces of community equipment to 3.2 million service users every year in England alone; many of these service users are wholly dependent on equipment for their day to day activities. This demonstrates how important it is to get community equipment services right.

7.32 Evidence of the way in which bulk purchasing can reduce the cost of community equipment is provided by Croydon Care Solutions. This local authority trading company offers a procurement service to a number of local authorities. The first seven local authority partners save on average 39 per cent of their equipment spend in a full year without reducing service quality.

As yet this is not a national service but it could be. It is also possible to see how the service could be extended beyond public authorities to enable disabled individuals who buy their own equipment to benefit from lower prices.

7.33 Better value for money has also been achieved at a Government-level. For example, in the late 1990s the Department of Health and the Royal National Institute of Deaf People cooperated to reduce the cost to the health service of digital hearing aids using the purchasing power of the government to place large orders at competitive prices without compromising choice.

Our recommendations

R13. There should be a detailed investigation of the depth and breadth of poverty experienced by disabled people, which does not use calculations that include Disability Living Allowance (DLA) and Personal Independence Payment (PIP) as income while taking no account of additional disability-related costs.

R14. Government should make renewed efforts to integrate public services, including health and social care.

R15. We welcome Labour’s commitment to abolish the Bedroom Tax, which has a disproportionate impact on disabled people.

R16. Government should invest in accessible and affordable housing and transport.

R17. The Local Housing Allowance should be reviewed as a matter of urgency.

R18. Clear limits should be placed upon the ability of local councils to take account of the PIP in assessing the incomes of disabled people in relation to care charges. The health and social care systems exhibit distinct cultures. We support the greater integration of health and social care but highlight the potential negative implications to independent living should the more medical model of the NHS dominate.

R19. The statistical ‘norms’ that have been identified as influencing the outcomes of the WCA must not be replicated in arrangements for moving claimants from DLA to PIP. An incoming government should commission a full review of both the roll-out of PIP and the mechanisms for ensuring that it is rigorous, objective, accurate and humane. This process should fully engage disabled people and their organisations. Entitlement should be based on assessed need, not rationing.

R20. Government should consider the feasibility of enhancing DLA/PIP by introducing an additional third element designed to contribute towards disability costs not covered by the two current components of either benefit. This should not be taken into account as part of a person’s income when charges are made for public services. We suggest the new three-component benefit be called a Disability Costs Allowance, as this accurately reflects its purpose. It would comprise elements for mobility, care and general costs. Disabled people and their organisations should be involved in the design of the new benefit.

R21. National and local government should use their purchasing power to drive down prices of disability-related equipment and services, including insurance. The value of robust purchasing power is shown in the Motability car scheme, which provides excellent value for money. Government should consult disabled people and their organisations on measures that could be taken to ensure disabled people and the taxpayer receive maximum value for money through the use of public sector purchasing capacity. This need not necessarily involve government doing the purchasing. It could, for example, be a consortium of charities supported by taxpayers’ funds.

R22. Government should revert to the 50-metre distance test in respect of eligibility for the higher rate mobility component of PIP (or any replacement benefit).

8. A renewed commitment to equality for disabled people

The problem

8.1 The link between disability and poverty will not be broken until disabled people are treated equally and fairly across society: in the workplace; in their access to goods and services; and in the social security system. A renewed commitment to disability equality is therefore a vital tool in an anti-poverty strategy for disabled people.

8.2 The disability employment penalty we refer to in the first chapter, the unfair impact of the Bedroom Tax on disabled people, and the failure to develop innovative solutions to the cost of living issues faced by disabled people are all signs of the failure to take disability equality seriously. This failure clearly adds to the risk of poverty; as we point out in chapter 4, disabled people are less likely to have a current account and almost one in ten has been turned down for insurance, with 22 per cent believing their impairment drives up their premiums.Yet we know that measures such as the Disability Discrimination Act and the Equality Act have made a real difference to the lives of disabled people, including contributing to the increase over the last decade in their chances of gaining employment.

Current policies and programmes

8.3 Despite the clear impact of measures to promote disability equality, the tools which we use to assess progress towards this goal are being dismantled. Tools to assess the likely and actual impact of policies on disabled people and other disadvantaged groups have been undermined by the current government.

8.4 The Prime Minister announced, in a speech in November 2011 to the Confederation of British Industry, that “we are calling time on equality impact assessments”, which he described as “bureaucratic nonsense”. The subsequent review of the Public Sector Equality Duty failed to find hard evidence in support of this assertion yet the final report made similar claims.

8.5 The capacity (powers, people, money) of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) has been seriously undermined. When the EHRC opened in 2007 it had a budget of £70 million and 525 staff. By March 2013 the Commission’s budget was reduced to £26 million with around 200 staff. The Commission’s powers have been undermined, including its ability to take test cases, which clarify the law and send powerful messages to those discriminating. This is only marginally more than the 2006-7 operating budget of the predecessor Disability Rights Commission, despite the EHRC’s role spanning all equality grounds and human rights.

This has seriously impeded the promotion of disability equality in Britain, with far less activity to raise awareness among and to support employers to meet their duties and to embrace good practice, the loss of the DRC’s successful Helpline which was dealing with over 100,000 calls per year from disabled people and those with duties under the law, and a sharp decline in the number of test cases, which clarify the law and send powerful messages to those discriminating, at a time when access to redress for individuals has been made all but impossible by changes to the legal aid system.

8.6 The Office for Disability Issues, established by the last government to coordinate implementation of the Prime Ministers Strategy Unit report ‘Improving the Life Chances of Disabled People’ has also been the object of major cuts in budget and staff. There seems little evidence of strong cross-government working to promote disabled people’s rights, as required by Article 33 of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

Our recommendations

R23. The publicly-funded infrastructure supporting disabled people’s rights inside and outside of government should be the subject of a comprehensive review and reforms need to be implemented to ensure effective coordination, promotion and enforcement of policy, law and best practice (in line with Article 33 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities). This includes the roles of the Equality and Human Rights Commission and the Office for Disability Issues. Restrictions of disabled people’s access to justice, such as the £1200 fee for using an employment tribunal, should be removed.

R24. There should be routine, rigorous and transparent analysis by government departments and public authorities of the likely impact of and opportunities arising from proposed policy and legislation with respect to disability equality. This may be via a renewed commitment to equality impact assessment, including by revising the ‘specific duties’ in regulation related to s149 of the Equality Act 2010, or an improved methodology. Public authorities should in future be required to set out mitigating actions where policy and legislation, including spending decisions, appear to have a likely negative impact on disability equality, as for example the Bedroom Tax proved to do.

R25. There should be investment in creating a sea-change in employer behaviour on recruitment, development and retention of disabled people. This should include the exploration of behavioural insight methodologies such as those developed for ‘Trading for Good’, the linking of positive employment practices to enhanced market position and the consideration of incentives via the tax system, rewarding good practice.

R26. Major public expenditure decisions should only be made after a thorough cost-benefit appraisal. In particular, this should include a full analysis of the future economic and social impact. It clearly does not make sense to fail to invest sufficiently in those areas where future gains outweigh current costs. Similarly, it does not make sense to make public expenditure cuts now where this results in greater costs in the future.

R27. There should be local inclusive growth strategies which bring together economic regeneration, support for business, job creation, and skills and employment support for disabled people. They should be led locally by partnerships of local councils, Jobcentre Plus, businesses, education and training providers and disabled people’s organisations, with support from regional growth agencies and nationally by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills.

R28. Policies and services should be co-produced with disabled people’s organisations.

Appendix 1: The social model of disability

The social model of disability is a way of thinking about disability that focuses on the need to dismantle the barriers that disabled people face – of attitude, policy and environment – that prevent them from reaching their full potential. It was developed by disabled people as a riposte to the charitable or tragedy model of disability, whereby disabled people’s lives were inevitably tragic and limited, their life chances and outcomes fixed solely because of their impairments.

The social model has been accepted for many years, including recently by governments, as a useful tool in considering how to improve the lives of disabled people.

However, it does not for the most part inform how disability is measured and understood within the social security system. The criteria by which eligibility for disability benefits is assessed tend to look in isolation at the degree of functional limitation imposed by a person’s impairment or health condition on their ability to carry out various activities.

They do not typically take account of extrinsic factors – such as the extent of employment discrimination towards people with mental health problems or the availability of accessible housing and transport – or the influence of other aspects of individual identity or circumstance, such as qualifications, social class or ethnicity

Nor does the ‘social model’ inform the way that population estimates are arrived at, how estimates are made regarding the numbers of disabled people in or out of paid employment or how many people are protected by the Equality Act 2010. There are different definitions to determine such estimates but each is based on solely medical or functional criteria.

So while it is possible to chart how many people with impairments or long-term health conditions there are overall and how many households including such people live in poverty – and to demonstrate that it is disproportionately high – we cannot ascribe this entirely to “the interaction between persons with impairments and attitudinal and environmental barriers” (i.e. what is specifically ‘disability-related’), as other factors influencing income and expenditure are not screened out.

We do know that very substantial inequalities exist among disabled people. While we largely discuss here, for reasons of time and space, issues for all of those who can be defined as ‘disabled’ in Britain, people’s experiences vary.

This can relate, among other things, to:

  • when and how they acquired their impairment(s) or health condition(s)
  • the type of impairment(s) or health condition(s)
  • their early life opportunities
  • their ethnic or religious background
  • their skills and qualifications
  • where they live
  • their gender
  • whether or not they have a partner or children
  • their age
  • their sexual orientation.

For example, the employment rate for disabled men without qualifications halved between the mid-1970s and early 2000s; fewer than one in four disabled people from a Pakistani background are in employment; and just over one in five disabled people with no qualifications is employed. We must recognise that the causes of disadvantage faced by people with impairments and long-term health conditions are diverse and not amenable to ‘one size fits all’ solutions.

This has significant implications for public policy and practice and highlights the need for further research. In particular, it demonstrates that any efforts to address poverty among disabled people will only succeed if based on a detailed appreciation of the causes of poverty, and as part of both a wider anti-poverty strategy and a wider disability rights strategy.

Appendix 2 Disability and incapacity benefits timeline

* The following benefits are current and new claims may be made for them.

Disability benefits

1971 (December): Attendance Allowance. A non-contributory benefit paid to cover the extra costs of personal care, paid to those aged two and over; not means-tested and not taxable. Assessment of care or supervision needs by way of medical examinations and medical boards.

Paid at two levels, depending on whether care or supervision was needed just during the day or the night, or both day and night.

Replaced by the care component of Disability Living Allowance and Attendance Allowance in 1992 (see below).

1976: Mobility Allowance. A flat-rate non-contributory benefit paid to cover the extra costs of getting around, paid to those between the ages of five and 64 (inclusive). Not means-tested and not taxable. Assessment of mobility problems by way of medical examinations and medical boards.

Replaced by the mobility component of Disability Living Allowance in 1992 (see below).

1992 (April): Disability Living Allowance. A non-contributory benefit paid to cover the extra costs of personal care and getting around. Paid to those below the age of 65. Not means-tested. Not taxable.

Two components: a care component and a mobility component. The care component is paid at three different levels: the highest rate for those requiring day and night care or supervision; a middle rate for those requiring just day-time or just night-time care or supervision; and a lowest rate for those requiring part-time day care.

The mobility component is paid at two different levels: the higher rate for those unable or virtually unable to walk (other limited categories may also apply); a lower rate for people able to walk but who require guidance or supervision to do so.

Self-assessment forms are used to determine care or supervision needs and mobility problems, often followed by an assessment under ATOS.

Replaced by Personal Independence Payment for those of working age from 2013 (see below). Continues for children under 16*.

1992 (April): Attendance Allowance.* A non-contributory benefit paid to cover the extra costs of personal care to those aged 65 and over. Not means-tested and not taxable.

Paid at two levels, depending on whether care or supervision is needed just during the day or the night, or both day and night.

Self-assessment forms are used to determine care or supervision needs, sometimes followed up by an assessment by Atos.

2013 (April): Personal Independence Payment.* A non-contributory benefit paid to cover the extra costs of participating in everyday life and getting around. Not means-tested. Not taxable. Paid to those of working age (16 to 64 inclusive).

Two components: a daily living component and a mobility component. Each is payable at two different levels; a standard rate and an enhanced rate; depending on whether the claimant’s ability to carry out ‘daily living activities’ or ‘mobility activities’ is limited or severely limited.

Tested under a points-based assessment; with points awarded in relation to the daily living activities and mobility activities. Self-assessment forms are used to gain information to determine the appropriate score, usually followed up by an assessment under Atos or Capita.

Incapacity benefits (contributory and non-contributory)

1948: Sickness Benefit. A flat-rate contributory benefit paid to those incapable of work. In 1966 an earnings-related supplement was introduced (abolished in 1982).

1971: Sickness Benefit. A contributory benefit paid to those who were incapable of work for up to 28 weeks (after that Invalidity Benefit could be claimed (see below)). Not means-tested. Not taxable. Paid at a flat rate, with additions for adult and child dependants. Replaced by Incapacity Benefit in 1995 (see below).

1971: Invalidity Benefit. A contributory benefit paid to those who were incapable of work for more than 28 weeks. Not means-tested. Not taxable.

Made up of a basic rate: the ‘Invalidity Pension’ (payable at a higher rate than Sickness Benefit) plus an age-related ‘Invalidity Allowance’ (related to the age of onset of the incapacity: the lower the age, the higher the allowance). Additions for adult and child dependants could be included. From 1979, an earnings-related addition could also be included.

Continued incapacity was assessed by DHSS doctors and was set against the type of work that the DHSS decided the claimant would be capable of (having regard to their ‘age, education, state of health and other personal factors’).

Replaced by Incapacity Benefit in 1995 (see below).

1975 (Autumn): Non-Contributory Invalidity Pension (NCIP). A non-contributory benefit paid to those who were incapable of work for at least 28 weeks but not entitled to Sickness or Invalidity Benefit (see above). Not means-tested. Not taxable.

Flat basic rate (payable at a lower rate than the basic rate of Invalidity Benefit), with additions available for adult and child dependants. Replaced by Severe Disablement Allowance in 1984 (see below).

1977 (November): Non-Contributory Invalidity Pension for Married Women. A non-contributory benefit paid to married women who were incapable of work for at least 28 weeks but not entitled to Sickness or Invalidity Benefit (see above). Not means-tested. Not taxable. Additional test (not found in NCIP) that the claimant must be ‘incapable of normal household duties’.

Flat basic rate (the same as the NCIP), with additions available for adult and child dependants in very limited circumstances. Replaced by Severe Disablement Allowance in 1984 (see below).

1983: Statutory Sick Pay.* Employer-paid non-contributory flat-rate benefit paid to employees who are too ill to work. A simple earnings rule applies. Taxable. Payable for up to 8 weeks (or 28 weeks from 1986) in one or more periods of sickness.

1984 (November): Severe Disablement Allowance. A non-contributory benefit paid to those who were incapable of work. Not means-tested. Not taxable. Unless the claimant was disabled before they were aged 20, eligibility was based on a test of the prescribed degrees of disablement, the threshold set at a disablement of 80% or more.

Flat basic rate (payable at a lower rate than the basic rate of Invalidity Benefit). Age-related additions available on top of the basic rate. Additions available for adult and child dependants (although additions for child dependants were abolished for new claims from April 2003).

Replaced by Employment and Support Allowance in 2008 (see below).

1995 (April): Incapacity Benefit. A contributory benefit paid to those who were incapable of work. Not means-tested. Taxable. The test of incapacity was based on the ‘Own Occupation Test’ for the first 28 weeks; thereafter it was based on the ‘Personal Capability Assessment’, a points-based assessment of functionality. Self-assessment forms were used to gain information to determine the appropriate score, usually followed up by a medical (administered by The DWP medical service).

Paid at three different rates dependent on the period of the incapacity (a short-term lower rate for the first 28 weeks; a short-term higher rate for weeks 29 to 52; and a long-term rate for periods of more than 52 weeks). Age-related additions available on top of the long-term rate. Additions available for adult and child dependants (although additions for child dependants were abolished for new claims from April 2003).

Replaced by Employment and Support Allowance in 2008 (see below).

2008 (October): Employment and Support Allowance.* Employment and Support Allowance (ESA) is paid to those who have a ‘limited capability for work’. It has a contributory element and a means-tested element. Either (or both) may be payable. The contributory element is taxable. From April 2012, awards of the contributory element have been limited to 12 months (unless the claimant is placed in the ‘support group’ – see below). The means-tested element will eventually be replaced by Universal Credit.

The test of limited capability for work comes under the ‘Work Capability Assessment’, a points-based assessment of functionality. This assessment also tests whether the claimant has a ‘limited capability for work-related activity’; this will determine whether the claimant is placed in the ‘work-related activity group’ or the ‘support group’ of claimants. Claimants in the former group have to engage in work-related activity to retain the benefit. Self-assessment forms are used to gain information to determine the appropriate score, usually followed up by an assessment under Atos.

Both the means-tested and the contributory elements are made up of a basic allowance and, following the application of the Work Capability Assessment, an additional payment: either the ‘work-related activity component’ or the ‘support component’ (depending on which of the two above groups the claimant is placed in). No age-related additions or additions for dependants.

Means-tested benefits

1966: Supplementary Benefit. Universal means-tested benefit. Administered at first on a discretionary basis by the Supplementary Benefits Commission; later on a statutory basis by the Department for Health & Social Security.

Supplementary Benefit contained extra allowances, some of which covered extra costs related to disability:

A ‘heating allowance’ was available at three different levels: a lower rate for claimants who found it difficult to get around or had chronic ill-health; a middle rate for housebound claimants; and a higher rate for bedfast claimants.

An ‘extra allowance for diet’ was available at three different levels: a lower rate for claimants who had been medically recommended diets; a middle rate for claimants suffering from specific conditions; and a higher rate for claimants dependent on a kidney machine.

An ‘extra allowance for laundry’ was available for claimants with extra laundry needs due to illness, incontinence, disability or infirmity due to age.

Supplementary Benefit was replaced by Income Support in 1988 (see below).

1988 (April): Income Support.* The principle means-tested benefit for several years. Started out as a universal means-tested benefit; scope was reduced over time (see below).

Disability support within Income Support composed of three elements: the ‘disability premium’, the ‘severe disability premium’ and (from April 2001) the ‘enhanced disability premium’. These replaced the extra allowances found in Supplementary Benefit (see above). Claimants with high additional costs covered by these allowances lost out.

The ‘disability premium’ is the most commonly paid element. Broad eligibility conditions include receipt of Disability Living Allowance (DLA) or Personal Independence Payment (PIP).

A higher ‘severe disability premium’ payable in addition to the ‘disability premium’. Complex eligibility conditions tightened over the years, include receipt of DLA care component at middle or higher rate (or PIP daily living component) and the claimant to technically count as living alone.

A further ‘enhanced disability premium’; payable to claimants in receipt of highest rate DLA care component or enhanced rate PIP daily living component.

Replaced by: income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance, for unemployed claimants (in October 1996; see below); Pension Credit, for claimants over the qualifying age (in October 2003; see below); and income-related Employment and Support Allowance, for claimants with a limited capability for work (in October 2008; see below). Child support moved to Child Tax Credit in 2003 (see below). Still available to carers and lone parents with young children.

For remaining claimants, Income Support to be replaced by Universal Credit from October 2013 (see below).

1992 (April): Disability Working Allowance. Means-tested benefit for disabled people in relatively low-paid work. Eligibility through receipt of a qualifying benefit. Disability Working Allowance was replaced by Disabled Person’s Tax Credit in 1999 (see below).

1996 (October): Income-based Jobseeker’s allowance* Means-tested benefit for Unemployed claimants. Disability support within income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance reflects that of Income Support (see above). Income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance to be replaced by Universal Credit from October 2013 (see below).

1999 (October): Disabled Person’s Tax Credit. Means-tested benefit for disabled people in relatively low-paid work. Eligibility through receipt of a qualifying benefit. It was paid and administered by the Inland Revenue. Disabled Person’s Tax Credit was replaced by Working Tax Credit in 2003 (see below).

2003 (April): Child Tax Credit.* Means-tested benefit for people, whether working or not, who are responsible for children. It replaced child allowances in Income Support and income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance and the increases for child dependants paid in non-means-tested benefits. Paid and administered by HMRC. Detail based on tax law.

Disability support composed of the ‘disabled child element’ (included for each child who receives either component of DLA or PIP) and an additional ‘severely disabled child element’ (included for each child who receives the highest rate of the DLA care component or the enhanced rate of the PIP daily living component).

Child Tax Credit to be replaced by Universal Credit from October 2013 (see below).

2003 (April): Working Tax Credit.* Means-tested benefit for people in relatively low paid work. Paid and administered by HMRC. Detail based on tax law.

Disability support composed of the ‘disability element’ (included if the worker has a disability ‘that puts them at a disadvantage in getting a job’ and receives; or has been in receipt of, a qualifying disability benefit) and an additional ‘severe disability element’ (included for each member of a couple who receives the higher rate of Attendance Allowance, the highest rate of the DLA care component or the enhanced rate of the PIP daily living component).

Working Tax Credit to be replaced by Universal Credit from October 2013 (see below).

2003 (October): Pension Credit.* Means-tested benefit for claimants over the qualifying age (currently 65 for men, and in the process of being raised to 65 for women). Disability support within Pension Credit limited to the ‘severe disability addition’, similar to the Income Support ‘severe disability premium’ (see above).
State Pension Credit Act 2002

2008 (October): Income-related Employment and Support Allowance.* Income-related Employment and Support Allowance (ESA) is the means-tested element of ESA. Paid to those who have a ‘limited capability for work’. For details, see ‘Employment and Support Allowance’ above.

Income-related ESA retains the ‘enhanced disability premium’ and the ‘severe disability premium’ from Income Support. However, instead of the Income Support ‘disability premium’, there is the ‘work-related activity component’ or the ‘support component’. Since these components are paid at the same rate for single people and couples, couples have lost out when moved onto income-related ESA.

Income-related ESA to be replaced by Universal Credit from October 2013 (see below).

2013 (October): Universal Credit.* Replacing Income Support, income related ESA, income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance, Housing Benefit, Child Tax Credit and Working Tax Credit. Currently only being tested in pilot areas to limited groups of claimants. Rollout to rest of country ambitiously targeted for 2017.

The disability support for adults of working age is limited to the ‘work-related activity component’ and the ‘support component’. These are similar to the two comparable components within ESA (see above), and will similarly be tested by a Work Capability Assessment. The lack of equivalents within Universal Credit for the ‘enhanced disability premium’ and the ‘severe disability premium’ (contained within ESA) will lead to a substantial number of losers; particularly of single disabled people and couples where both have disabilities.

The disability support for children with disabilities is provided by an ‘additional amount for a disabled child’. This is paid at two different levels: a higher rate for a child who is entitled to DLA highest rate care component or PIP enhanced rate daily living component, and a lower rate for a child who is entitled to any other rate of DLA or PIP. The lower rate is payable at a lower level than the equivalent ‘disabled child element’ within Child Tax Credit.

Appendix 3 Chair and members of the Taskforce

Sir Bert Massie CBE, Taskforce chair

Bert Massie is a governor of Motability and Liverpool John Moores University. He chairs the Volunteer Centre Liverpool and is a trustee of Raise and Local Solutions, both based in Liverpool. He is a member of the Baring Foundation Panel on the Independence of the Voluntary Sector and chairs the Community Equipment Code of Practice Scheme CIC. Previously he was the Commissioner for the Compact, a founding Commissioner of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, chairman of the Disability Rights Commission and CEO of The Royal Association for Disability & Rehabilitation (now Disability Rights UK). He has been a member of a number of committees advising various governments on policy relating to disabled people.

Roger Berry

Dr Roger Berry was the Member of Parliament for Kingswood from 1992 to 2010, during which time he was secretary and then co-chair of the All Party Parliamentary Disability Group. He introduced a number of Bills on disability issues. None reached the Statute Book, but most of their provisions were included in subsequent legislation, in particular the Disability Discrimination Acts and the Equality Act. He is currently a Trustee of Disability Rights UK and of Action on Work and Disability UK. Before being elected an MP he was a lecturer in economics at the Universities of Bristol, Papua New Guinea and Sussex.

Neil Crowther

Neil Crowther is an independent consultant specialising in equality and human rights, with a particular interest in disability rights. He advises and supports a range of UK and international governmental and non-governmental organisations. Recent work includes advising and drafting the final report by the Joint Parliamentary Committee on Human Rights following its inquiry into disabled people’s right to independent living, contributing to the European Commission report to the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and co-authoring ‘Taking Control of Employment Support’ which recommended replacing the Work Programme with bespoke support commissioned by disabled people and employers. Neil was previously Director of the Disability Programme at the Equality and Human Rights Commission and before that Head of Policy at the Disability Rights Commission.

Agnes Fletcher

Agnes Fletcher supports organisations in the public and third sectors to respond positively to human diversity and to meet their obligations under the Equality Act 2010. She is a disabled person who has worked for disability equality for more than 20 years, first at the international level, building on the United Nations Decade of Disabled People, and then in Britain on the campaign for anti-discrimination legislation. Agnes was a director of the Disability Rights Commission for five years, leading on communications and employment. She is a trustee of advocacy organisation POhWER and of disability organisation Scope.

Kaliya Franklin

Kaliya Franklin is co-development lead of People First England, a self-advocacy organisation for adults with learning disabilities, particularly focused on the use of new media campaigning techniques. Kaliya is a disabled speaker, writer and campaigner recognised as having in-depth knowledge of the day-to-day experiences of people living with a variety of disabling conditions and disabilities. Founder of The Broken of Britain and co-author/producer of the first Spartacus report ‘Responsible Reform’, Kaliya regularly contributes by invitation to radio discussions and has written for The Guardian and The Independent. She is a Patron of the Hypermobility Syndromes Association. Kaliya is the author of the Orwell Prize 2012 shortlisted blog, Benefit Scrounging Scum. In 2013, with the charity United Response, Kaliya was the co-creator of the first news service in ‘easy read’ for people with learning disabilities, Easy News.

Ian Greaves

Ian Greaves is editor of the ‘Disability Rights Handbook’, published by Disability Rights UK, and is currently working on the 39th edition. He previously worked as a tribunals officer for DIAL Bradford for over a decade. His first publication, ‘Disability Benefits in a Nutshell’, was published by DIAL. Ian has since written numerous guides on disability benefits, both for Disability Rights UK and for a range of other organisations, including the MS Society, the National Rheumatoid Arthritis Society, the National Ankylosing Spondylitis Society and Parkinson’s UK.

The Labour Party commissioned Poverty and Disability Taskforce Report in a nutshell

Kate Green MP and Rachel Reeves MP preempted publication of this report last week. in a newspaper article (which is curiously not currently available online) in which they announced that they would reform the Work Capability Assessment. I look forward to reading more about the detail of their plans in addition to their response to the other proposals in the report regarding employment support, access to work, costs of living and re-establishing our approach to equality.

The Labour Party commissioned Poverty & Disability Taskforce Report in a nutshell

By Neil Crowther
The Labour Party-commissioned taskforce on breaking the link between disability and poverty, of which I was a member, concluded in its final report published today that Britain can and must invest public resources more effectively than at present to create the infrastructure of support that will enable disabled people to escape and remain resilient to poverty.
This is especially so in these tough economic times when, despite public spending cuts, millions of pounds of public money are being wasted on poorly designed, ineffective and bureaucratic systems and approaches such as the Work Capability Assessment, the Work Programme and fragmented public services. Disabled people frequently face more red-tape than the average small business in securing the support just to lead lives that everyone else takes for granted. This contributes to, rather than helps relieve, poverty, undermining people’s life chances.
So we call for reform of assessments which should focus on people’s interaction with the world around them, including in the labour market, rather than just at the functional impact of their impairment or health condition. We back the proposals of Disability Rights UK to replace the Work Programme with localised, personalised employment support that places disabled people and employers in the driving seat. We propose an uplift in investment in Access to Work given the clear returns to the Treasury of the scheme.
We call for greater integration of employment support, health, social care and education around people in support of their participation. And we seek a re-commitment to and improvement of our approach to disability equality, including assessing the impact of policies, removing the costs of employment tribunals in discrimination cases and renewing the institutional support for disability equality including the EHRC and the ODI.
We also explore how disability related extra costs of living might be reduced for example through national and local government using its buying power to reduce the costs of aids and equipment and through preventing benefits being swallowed up by social care charges.
We conclude however that disability related poverty cannot be tackled without further investment in a disability costs benefit. This will take time to develop and implement, but we believe it a matter of social justice (and equality) that as disabled people have borne so much of the ‘austerity’ spending cuts, despite pre-existing poverty and exclusion, that they should be priority beneficiaries of the proceeds of inclusive economic growth.
RELATED
Breaking the link between Poverty and Disability –  full report
Posted on 24-04-14 by Sir Bert Massie – A submission to Labour’s policy review from the Independent Taskforce on Poverty and Disability, chaired by Sir Bert Massie.
Atos Healthcare Parliamentary Debate 17-Jan-2013 (Full debate)
John McDonnell MP speaking up for Atos Healthcare victims.
The ESA ‘Revolving Door’ Process, and its Correlation with a Significant Increase in Deaths amongst the Disabled.
Clause 99, Catch 22 – The ESA Mandatory Second Revision and Appeal
What you need to know about Atos assessments.
394704_371073749628826_312401163_n
                               Many thanks to Robert Livingstone

crowtherconsulting's avatarMaking rights make sense

The Labour Party-commissioned taskforce on breaking the link between disability and poverty, of which I was a member, concluded in its final report published today that Britain can and must invest public resources more effectively than at present to create the infrastructure of support that will enable disabled people to escape and remain resilient to the poverty.

This is especially so in these tough economic times when, despite public spending cuts, millions of pounds of public money is being wasted on poorly designed, ineffective and bureaucratic systems and approaches such as the Work Capability Assessment, the Work Programme and fragmented public services.  Disabled people frequently face more red-tape than the average small business in securing the support just to lead lives everyone else takes for granted.  This contributes to, rather than helps relieve, poverty, undermining people’s life chances.

So we call for reform of assessments which should focus on people’s interaction…

View original post 243 more words