Author:
ALCOCK PETE,PEARSON SARAH
Abstract
The role of means-testing within social policy has become more important
and more central in the 1990s. However, extensive reliance on
means-testing brings with it the accompanying problems of the unemployment
and poverty traps. In the 1990s these take on more of the form
of a poverty plateau, accentuated by a new savings trap. This article uses
hypothetical calculations of benefit entitlement in order to explore the
extent of the poverty plateau, and looks in particular at the impact on
this of the growing use of means-tested rebates by local authorities.
Means-tested rebates have been developed by authorities because of
a concern that the new charges for services that they are making
might disadvantage poor local citizens. Drawing on work of one typical
authority, this article reveals that these rebates do add significantly to the
poverty plateau, and yet that this is an issue which is little understood by
both local and national policy planners.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Public Administration,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Cited by
23 articles.
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