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Stigma against benefits has made devastating poverty acceptable in Britain


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Stigma against benefits has made devastating ******** acceptable in Britain

Credit: Avonne Stalling from Pexels

Britain is in a ******** crisis. Over

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(1 in 5) are living in ********. Of these, 4 million, including 1 million children, are classed as destitute: regularly unable to meet basic needs for shelter, warmth, food and clothing.

Cuts to the ******** state over the last decade have contributed to a

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in Britain not seen in any of its ********* neighbors. What sets Britain apart (and has made it possible for these cuts to continue) is the intense stigma placed on people living in ******** and who receive state benefits.

Stigma sorts people into two categories “the deserving” and “the undeserving.” Elderly (pension-aged) citizens, children and disabled people have tended to fall into the deserving category, while people deemed able-bodied and hence able to work are viewed more harshly if they receive support.

This has been seen throughout this election campaign, in discussions about getting people back into work. Rishi Sunak has said that the Conservatives intend to cut the ******** bill by getting people into work. In the last debate, he said it was

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for people on benefits to not take a job they are offered after 12 months out of work. The implication here is that some people who receive benefits are cheating the system.

Social policy researchers Robert Walker and Elaine Chase argue that using stigma to ration relief is a

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that declined in more egalitarian, less class-riven ********* states.

Stereotypes pitting “scroungers” against those in “genuine” need have been especially acute in the age of austerity. From 2010, the coalition government sought support for swingeing cuts to the ******** and benefits system by persuading the public that those receiving benefits were “trapped in dependency.” Then prime minister David Cameron

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“a war on ******** culture” in 2011, arguing that the benefit system “actively encourages” people to act irresponsibly.

A moral panic about “benefits cheats” followed. Politicians and journalists portrayed working-age adults receiving benefits as a lazy or ********* group who were deliberately scamming hardworking taxpayers. Hundreds of hours of reality TV programs exploited this theme, creating the new genre of “

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.”






The late social policy expert John Hills argued that framing state ******** as an unaffordable system of cash benefits exploited by “economically inactive” people is incorrect, and a ruse by politicians to slash all public services. Drawing on social attitudes data, he

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that the very idea of ******** had contracted in public consciousness to a debate about “a stagnant group of people benefiting from it all, while the rest pay in and get nothing back—’skivers’ against ‘strivers.'”

Sunak has revived these claims with proclamations about Britain’s supposed “***** note culture” with disabled people “

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.”

This view is borne out in policies that have, over time, increased job search and work requirements—known as “conditionality”—for people receiving benefits. This is despite evidence showing such policies don’t work, and that

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receiving universal credit are in work.

For more than a decade,

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the effects of stigma on people living in ********. I have interviewed health, public sector and charity workers, including
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and headteachers, about the effects of deepening ******** and the impact of this toxic stigma narrative.

By framing ******** in Britain as a deserved consequence of poor life choices or a reluctance to work, stigma

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from political decision-makers onto those struggling to make ends meet.

The impact of stigma

Feeling ashamed of being poor stops people

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. The gnawing anxiety that their lack of resources will be exposed to others can lead people to withdraw from social activities and become isolated. A former schoolteacher I interviewed was forced to give up work due to illness as stories about benefits cheats peaked:

“You only have to watch any program and there is evidence there that your kind are hated. These people are stealing your taxes and you’re thinking, ‘that is me they are talking about.’ Trapped in this cycle of being hated by everybody … It’s relentless. Never-ending. One constant cycle of judgment. Until you are ashamed to do anything.”

I am part of a team commissioned by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation to investigate the effects of stigma and explore how to stop it. Our

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describes stigma as “a glue that holds ******** in place.” When politicians (through speeches and policy) and the media (through reality television or stigmatizing reports) teach us to see ******** as a result of others’ bad choices rather than a systemic problem, it becomes socially acceptable. In this way, ******** and ******** stigma reinforce each other.

As we are exploring, stigma can be designed out of policies and services. For example, measures to

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the school day such as changing how meals (and free school meals) are delivered so students are not marked out as different, making school uniforms more affordable and designing school events to be accessible to everybody can also help “stigma proof” schools for children from low-income families. But this only works if organizations first listen to and learn to see from the perspectives of those living in ********.

******** must be reframed as an issue of economic injustice, shifting blame away from individuals.

The next government must end the use of stigmatizing labels such as “economically inactive” to describe disabled people or people with unpaid caring responsibilities, or “low-skilled” to describe low-paid work. This latter point must go hand in hand with campaigning for greater

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and real living wages.

To end Britain’s ******** crisis, we all need to ******* stigma, by exposing it for what it is: a tool used by the powerful to justify economic inequality and injustice.

Provided by
The Conversation


This article is republished from

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under a Creative Commons license. Read the
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.

Citation:
Stigma against benefits has made devastating ******** acceptable in Britain (2024, June 28)
retrieved 28 June 2024
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