More on the Domestic Purposes Benefit

by frog

The Domestic Purpose Benefit was reformed in 2002. Before it was reformed the number of parents on the DPB had been slowly falling. They continued to fall after the 2002 reforms, from 100,652 in 2002, to 93,348 in 2006 (down 7.3%).

The Ministry of Social Development’s Statistical Report notes:

Since 2002, almost all working aged recipients of Domestic Purposes Benefits – Sole Parents or Emergency Maintenance Allowances have had a youngest dependent child aged 14 years or under. This included around 47% of these recipients who were caring for a child aged under five years (see table 3.13). By law, children aged less than 14 years require supervision at all times.

About 60% of those benefits went to sole parents whose children were under 5 years of age. The number of people on carers’ benefits (which includes the DPB) who cancelled those benefits because they found work increased steadily each year from 11,055 during 2001/2002 to 14,525 during 2005/06, while the number who transferred to another benefit fell from 8,364 to 6,011.

So here’s what we have;

  • Parents, mostly mothers, who are trying to care for their young children on their own.
  • A societal expectation that they should be at home to look after those children.
  • A competing expectation that they should go out and find work and get off the benefit.
  • The occasional attempt to demonise this group by suggesting that years of broken sleep and nappies is a lifestyle done for the purpose of living on a benefit. Personally if I wanted to ‘mooch off the state’ I think it might be a better lifestyle as an advisor at Treasury.
  • And a group of hard working mothers who are trying to meet all these expectations and the needs of their child or children, by working hard to use they benefit while they need it to support their children then working hard to find employment once they no longer need it.

frog says

Published in Economy, Work, & Welfare by frog on Mon, February 25th, 2008   

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