There?s two changes to the welfare system you should know about which are coming up. --- First, there?s an extension to the workfare program being introduced in August called ?Traineeships?. This is supposed to replace the existing programs of work experience for unemployed 16-19 year olds, with plans to expand it to 24 year olds, and as we?ve come to expect, it?s all about unpaid labour. As with all workfare schemes, the point is to provide free labour to businesses, which in turn undercuts the security and wages of those who do actually have real paying jobs. It is simply an attack on working-class living standards. To make matters worse for the young ?uns, the length of the scheme is being extended from 8 weeks up to 6 months, including up to 5 months unpaid graft at a work placement. And is there a job at the end of it? Well, there?s a guaranteed interview, which might get you an apprenticeship, on the princely wage of ?2.65 an hour. Or it might just be an opportunity for them to tell you to fuck off ? but in a constructive way, obviously. The second change is the launching of Universal Credit in October. The aim here is to combine all existing benefits in a single scheme. The sting in the tail which is going to give a nasty shock to a hell of lot of people (about 1.1 million in fact) is that those working less than 35 hours a week while claiming Working Tax Credit or Housing Benefit will be subject to mandatory job search activity which is supposed to encourage them to work more hours. Basically, they?re in for all of the joys of being treated like unemployed scum, scrabbling about for non-existent jobs. (At the time of writing there are 382,607 jobs listed on the Universal Jobmatch system, and upwards of 2.5 million unemployed. Once Universal Credit is launched, that?ll instantly mean a further 1.1 million people in the jobs market, effectively bringing the ?official? unemployed figures up to 3.6 million. Still, things can only get better, right?) Resistance to workfare is still ongoing, with numerous charities and businesses pulling out after having pickets turn up outside their premises, accusing them of profiting from forced labour. In the North-East, NEA have supported comrades from the Solidarity Federation in pickets of Holland & Barrett and Poundland. The workfare system can be stopped, by hitting the greedy bastards where it hurts: their profit margins. Pickets and consumer boycotts of businesses using workfare labour is one prong, what?s needed is supporting action from trade unions (needless to say, the spread of forced, unpaid labour is a threat to their existence too). Union members need to put pressure on their branches to refuse to work alongside workfare labour. It?d be nice if PCS members at the DWP refused to implement these rotten policies too. It really is a case of ?an injury to one is an injury to all? here, and we need to respond as a class. You might think you?ve got a secure job and it won?t effect you: don?t count on it. www.boycottworkfare.org/
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dinsdag 16 juli 2013
(en) Britain, North-East Anarchist Nee-Nar! #4 - Welfare Update
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