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Thursday, November 25, 2010

On a lighter note

4 comments:

  1. Kevin, what are you views on the likely impact of the minimum wage reduction?

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  2. Anonymous8:43 pm

    Moving the minimum wage down to €7.65 a hour - €298 for a 39 hour week or €15,500 a year is certainly compromised by the attractiveness of welfare at the margin (if one is concerned that work should be more valuable than welfare).

    The dole is currently €198 a week. Even if that is cut by €20 (10%) in the Budget on December 7th, that means a minimum wage employee would be working a 39 hour week for €120 more than they would get for doing nothing (or at least shirking). And of course, I have not mentioned many other benefits which must be relinquished if one takes up gainful employment.

    Without knowing the precise nature of the relative trade-off between welfare and work in Ireland, we can still (in principle) ask whether we should follow the UK in establishing a single universal (welfare) credit?
    According to George Osborne:

    “The limit will be set according to this very simple principle: Unless they have disabilities to cope with, no family should get more from living on benefits than the average family gets from going out to work”.

    Osborne Announcement: 4th October

    Of course the interaction between the U.K. minimum wage and the proposed universal credit is important. From what reading I have done so far on this, the emphasis seems to be on reducing benefits *gradually* as unemployed individuals enter the workforce, and work longer hours.

    The White Paper from the U.K. Department of Work and Pensions related to this topic can be read here:

    Universal Credit: Welfare That Works

    Some concerns about the universal credit are raised by the IFS in this article in the Telegraph:

    Telegraph article

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  3. Is that question a complete non sequitur Peter or a very clever reference to the post?

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  4. Anonymous11:51 am

    Haha, great cartoon!

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