It is hard to believe Liz Kendall's claims about unemployed young people

It is hard to believe Liz Kendall’s claims about unemployed young people

Considering the statistics she is using, it is hard to believe Liz Kendall’s claims about unemployed young people.

She is telling us that people aged 18-21 who refuse to work will have their benefits cut in the future, supporting herself with official figures saying nearly a million people between those ages were out of education, employment or training between July and September.

But this is hardly proof of an epidemic of laziness; for a start, higher education institutions are usually closed between July and September – as are training organisations, depending on what Kendall means by that. It is unreasonable to expect people to be attending those places at that time of year.

Furthermore, while it is common for young people to take jobs during the long summer break, This Writer is not convinced that many of them would willingly claim out-of-work benefits during that time, if they were going to go back to education afterwards; it simply would not be worth the aggravation.

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So it seems to me that any who are claiming benefits are probably in genuine need of them.

It occurs to me that Kendall [pictured] may be hoping to use an inflated July-September figure to falsely claim success for her “earn or learn” scheme – that probably doesn’t need the benefit of such a deception.

It occurs to me that, if offered an apprenticeship or a job instead of unemployment benefits, most young people who did not have higher education obligations would be happy to take either – so Kendall doesn’t need the crutch of a falsely-inflated unemployment figure to support any claims of success.

More concerning is the BBC article’s concentration on people claiming benefits due to ill-health.

That isn’t refusing to work, of course – such people simply can’t work at the moment – but the rhetoric used in the article suggests that they are work-shy, crying off it for the sake of it. That would be misleading.

If this new initiative is just another excuse to demonise people who are genuinely sick or disabled, then the media need to expose it as such – not support it as this BBC piece seems to.


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