There was a report of an opinion poll in the i paper
a few days ago on the issue of paying benefits to young people who are not in
employment, education or training. The article
itself is behind a paywall, but the data is available in Table 53 in this
report. The headline figure was that 56% of those questioned believed that
all benefits should be stopped for such people. As one might expect, the
numbers vary between supporters of different parties, with those supporting
parties of ‘the right’ most likely to support the proposition. Asked in
isolation, it’s easy to see why so many might support that (why, the
implication is, should anyone not seen to be ‘contributing’ expect to be
supported?), but I wonder whether the implications have been thought through by
those responding to the survey.
For people in that ‘NEET’ category, benefits are
likely to be their only direct source of income; removing it implies that those
56% of respondents are quite happy for the young people to go without food,
clothing or shelter. In reality, of course, many (but by no means all) in that
category will be living with their parents, who would presumably be expected to
continue paying the living costs for their adult offspring. The key economic
fact to note, though, is that the withdrawal of benefits from anyone means that
someone, somewhere, has their own spending power reduced. Maybe it’s the
individuals directly affected, maybe it’s their parents who are obliged to
divert money from their own discretionary expenditure. In economic terms, it
matters little to the basic conclusion: somebody’s spending power would be
reduced, with a consequent reduction in overall demand. In fact, there’s a more general point which this underlines – if a
government cuts spending or increases taxation in pursuit of the alleged
nirvana of a balanced budget, someone, somewhere must always have their spending
power reduced.
The political question is that the ‘who’ and the ‘where’
are ultimately choices being made by politicians. The claims that ‘benefits’ or
‘pensions’ are unaffordable are not the result of some iron-clad law of
economics; they are the direct result of political choices as to who should pay
for the entirely arbitrary need to pursue a balanced budget. Worse, they are
framed in such a way as to encourage us to believe that governments have no choice
but to act to reduce such expenditure, and that the impact of doing so will be
felt by ‘someone else’. But if we ask a rather different question, it’s easy
enough to expose the lie. That question is, in simple terms, ‘are there enough resources
in the UK to provide every citizen with a decent standard of living?’ The
answer, unquestionably, is ‘yes, of course there are’. That we ‘choose’ not to
use those resources to achieve that aim is down to ideology, not economics.
None of that, of course, provides an answer to the
problem of so-called NEETs – but then neither does simply cutting their
benefits. The only ‘problem’ that that solves is how we continue to ensure that
resources are concentrated in fewer and fewer hands. But that concentration of
wealth is the much bigger economic problem.