A Tory U-turn on benefit cuts can’t reverse the
colossal damage already done
Frances
Ryan
A rise in line with inflation would be the bare
minimum – Tory policies have been targeting Britain’s poorest people since 2010
‘In
Wednesday’s PMQs, Liz Truss ruled out public spending cuts, then rowed back
almost immediately.’
Wed 12 Oct
2022 16.20 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/oct/12/tory-u-turn-benefits-inflation-poor
There is a
growing trend on social media of teachers sharing stories of hungry children.
Told in fewer than 280 characters, they are dispatches from the frontline of
Britain’s growing poverty crisis. A few days ago, I saw an account in which a
primary school teacher noticed one of her 7-year-old pupils starting to cry
during a fire drill at lunchtime. It turned out the little boy wasn’t crying
because he was scared of a fire. His mum had told him there was no food at
home. If he missed his free school meal, he wouldn’t get any food that day.
I thought
of him as I watched the government continue to debate not raising benefits in
line with inflation – a move that research shows could push 450,000 more people
into poverty next April. A new study by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF)
demonstrates the scale: at least one in five working-age families in most
constituencies – including in Liz Truss’s seat – would lose out by hundreds of
pounds on average if the move goes ahead, just as energy and food bills
continue to rise. More parents staring at an empty cupboard; more children
afraid they won’t get their tea.
We are now
told that a final decision from the chancellor will not come until the end of
the month, though it’s thought a U-turn is on the cards. It is a pattern we are
already familiar with: the government leaks a horrifying policy, a backlash
ensues, the government backs down.
It would be
comforting to see this as success: that each U-turn is a win for progressives
or at least common decency. But it feels increasingly like these reversals
produce a false sense of security.
The term
“U-turn” suggests a harmless change of mind that does not cause any real
damage, like a driver caught out in a cul-de-sac. It ignores the fact that each
time ministers discuss cutting benefits, it normalises the idea that this is
necessary, placing discussion of whether hungry children should be supported by
the state under the category of “legitimate debate”. That millions of people
who rely on benefits must endure the anxious wait to see if they’ll be able to
afford to eat next year only confirms the message: so-called benefit claimants
are less human beings who deserve compassion and respect, more costly figures
on a spreadsheet.
A U-turn
also gives the false impression that the threat is over, as if the government
has seen sense and changed direction. If Truss does not cut benefits in real
terms, it will not be because she has chosen to do the right thing – it will be
because she has not drummed up enough support from her party to do wrong. Nor would
this mark a departure from her wider agenda. In this week’s PMQs, Truss ruled
out public spending cuts, then rowed back almost immediately. With the
Institute for Fiscal Studies calculating she will need to make cuts of £60bn by
2026 to fill the gap left by her unfunded tax cuts and extra borrowing – no
matter what is decided with benefit uprating – other, larger cuts to the
“welfare” budget could be on the way. Reports suggest ministers are trying to
find double the £5bn that would be secured by not raising benefits in line with
inflation, with touted measures including means testing benefits that are
currently universal, or cutting housing benefit.
After a
decade of stagnating wages and with benefits squeezed to a 40-year low, the
families targeted have already been pushed into debt, poorer health, and dire
housing. Austerity measures introduced by successive Conservative governments
since 2010 – from the two-child limit to the bedroom tax and the benefit cap –
are still quietly in force today. Only this month, an academic study found that
more than 330,000 excess deaths in Britain in recent years can be attributed to
spending cuts to public services and benefits introduced over the last decade.
That some benefits may be saved from real-terms cuts this time will offer
little relief to families pushed to the edge by multiple other “welfare
reforms”. It is hard to see the significance of a car manoeuvring out of the
cul-de-sac when you’re reeling from an eight-car pileup.
This is not
to say that there is no point in celebrating a reversal on benefits uprating if
it comes, or to ease off the pressure in the coming weeks: 450,000 people saved
from poverty – even if temporarily – is not unsubstantial. But we must not
ignore the wider scale of the damage caused to the poorest people in this
country, or what it is exactly about our politics and media that means we keep
coming back here.
The horror
that we are now seeing is not new. It has been happening for some time, and if
there is not real change to come, it will just continue. The struggle against
cutting benefits in real terms is a battle that can be won – but it is not the
war. Every child who does not have to cry from hunger is worth the fight.
Frances
Ryan is a Guardian columnist
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