'ACT JUSTLY; LOVE MERCY; WALK HUMBLY' Micah 3 v.8

Thursday 28 April 2011

How compassionate are the new Welfare Reforms?

Iain Duncan Smith MP, Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, spoke recently at a joint Theos/Charities Parliament event on the question of How Compassionate are the new Welfare Reforms?




Addressing representatives of local, national and international charities, public sector workers and journalists, Mr Duncan Smith laid out the rationale behind the Welfare Reform bill.



Working from the premise that the current system was too complex and it contained disincentives to work, and that social policy over recent years had offered too much stick and not enough carrot, Mr Duncan Smith drew on William Beveridge’s original vision of the welfare state. This would offer assistance to the needy but would also seek to motivate, offering incentives, opportunities and rewards to enable those in poverty to move out of the destructive cycles which have been so prevalent in recent decades.



Mr Duncan Smith focussed particularly on the Work Programme and other strategies for tackling unemployment, and affirmed the vital role the voluntary sector has to play in helping people find employment, saying,



“The destination for Government must be about life change. We have a duty to ensure that no-one is written off, no-one is discarded, no-one is left behind. Without the voluntary sector, the Work Programme will not succeed.



“You’re the ones that will change the lives, not me.”



The speech was followed by questions from the floor and a panel discussion between Steve Chalke (founder of Charities Parliament and Oasis), Cristina Odone (writer and journalist) and Chris Mould (Director of The Trussell Trust). To listen to the podcast of the event, click here and scroll down.

From the Theos April 2011 e/newsletter

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