Title: SWLF 3105 (Week 14) Today
1SWLF 3105 (Week 14)Todays theme Workfare
- Two important thoughts as we begin
- Is workfare really about work?
- If yes, what kind of work are we directing
workfare participants towards? If no, what is
really at issue here?
2Agenda for this week
- Update on proposed field trip for next semester.
400 approved! Now, we need to set a date, and
figure out what everyones willing to pay to
supplement costs. - Paper 3 any questions?
- Analysis of Week 14 readings (Course pack, Vol.
2 pp. 63-84)
31-2. A description and comparative assessment of
workfare programs
- Workfare programs generally involve an array of
incentives to encourage or compel SA recipients
to perform certain tasks or retraining exercises
in exchange for benefits. - Workfare policy has differed by jurisdiction. In
each case, however, a needs test forms an
essential component to encouraged or forced to
enrol in workfare programs. The partial or
complete loss of benefits is posed as a penalty
for non-participation.
41-2. A description and comparative assessment of
workfare programs
- Generally speaking, workfare programs operate
under the assumption that the SA users are lazy
and will avoid paid employment where possible. - Workfare placements often do not focus on skill
development, and are temporary in nature. - As a result, those without requisite skills to
leave workfare are trapped in revolving programs.
- Access to PSE remains the most statistically
proven method to improve job prospects.
51-2. A description and comparative assessment of
workfare programs
- Access to PSE remains the most statistically
proven method to improve job prospects. - Workfare programs have historically proven to be
expensive and difficult to manage. - Workfare placements have also tended to create a
downward pressure on existing wages.
6The failure of workfare in Quebec
- Quebecs experiment with workfare
- Created as a voluntary program, but benefits
would be reduced for SA users not participating - The laziness assumption was in effect assumed
problem was motivation, not a lack of decent
jobs. - Concerns raised around corporate welfare (PAIE),
and program relevancy for most SA users.
74. Non-profits as guardians of the poor
- CIT this feature of Quebecs workfare system put
non-profit groups in an awkward position. - SA workfare placements get 35 hour/wk jobs, but
most frequently were cycled back into EI and SA. - Serious implications for existing jobs this was
indicated in home care work. - Concerns around social justice organizations
offering a fig leaf for a lack of decent jobs.
85-6. SA dependence and workfare
- Recall from last week
- Where does the impression of an easy life on
welfare come from? -
- The 1995 cut in SA in Ontario had enormous public
support (gt70). Why? - Are the benefit levels involved with SA enough to
avoid dependence? - Workfare is described by proponents as an active
(and not passive) form of assistance for the poor.
97. Swanson and social policy experiments
- Where does Swansons criticism come from?
- AB case reviewed last week demonstrated the
dilemmas of tracking success in SA reform - A similar pattern was evident in NB Works.
- What is not addressed by re-fashioning SA via
Workfare? (GM handout on job queues in 01-1995)
108. A crisis of SA fraud?
- Recall from last week
- The reality of welfare fraud is one of the most
overblown issues in public policy. - 3 of the existing SA caseload, and often
overblown in the way the data is counted. - This is far less than comparable cases of tax
evasion or white collar crime. But why do we
hear so much about it? - Are we selective in our had of fraudulent acts?
Is the anger felt against existing SA fraud
illegitimate?
119. SA as a trap
- Again, from last week
- Is SA is a low-income trap for poor Canadians?
- Where do we assess the blame for this trap?
-
1210. Obligation and employment
- As a society, are we providing the same pressure
on creating decent jobs as we do in pushing a
strong work ethic? - Do employer incentives arrived at through
workfare help or hurt in this regard? - Is a decent job a right of citizenship?
1311. The psychology of poverty
- This argument deals with the daily pressures of
life on SA. - The pressure of little money for extras.
- Any extra expense becomes a crisis.
- How do we address the emotional trauma brought on
by experience with SA?
1412. On training as the solution
- For Swanson, training is a euphemism for work
harder in searching for any employment. - The focus here on individual aptitude, and not
wider economic concerns. - Despite some skill-based shortages, Canada as a
society is highly trained.
1513. Swanson take the rich off welfare
- Assess Swansons wealth policy challenge
- Is this an effective tactic in raising awareness
about gaps in research? Why or why not?
1614. Mackie and Workfare Watch
- Mackies article gives voice to critics of
workfare programs. - What do critics in this article conclude that
workfare is a waste of resources? - What are the implications of these findings?