Asquithian said:
As monetioned by generator. As long as those who are on disability pensions are not made to work in low income 'bad' jobs that pay less than the disabilty pension.
Colloquially taking you off the pension and making you find a job shelling peas, pealing potatos or putting shrink wrap on pill bottles.
Putting a price on health are we?
The cost of providing health should not be dictated by the cost...but rather by what is needed.
A healthy society does wonders for productivity.
Sorry Asqy, health costs can't keep rising to infinity, everything has to be sustainable. Otherwise in the long term you find things end up worse. I think there are many savings to be made in terms of medical equipment and drugs
, a lot of equipment purchased by hospitals is unecessary and exactly the same job can be performed cheaper without this equipment or by doctors/nurses. There is nothing like encouraging self-reliance in health costs when you have an ageing population though.
Welfare reform is always a difficult issue. There are definantly two sides to the argument. A relative of mine is on the disability support pension who suffers from anorexia among other things and while this obviously helps her in terms of income, I feel there must be must be some incentive to work where possible. The pension I think has discouraged her from getting out, working, interacting with others and most of all recovering. She has not had a job for years and her condititon was considerably better when she was working. Sometimes I think you have to use both the stick and carrot approach to improve people's welfare. The last thing we need though is a situation where this type of welfare is phased out.
Single parent benefits are a more complex issue, is it better to have one parent working and children in childcare or one parent at home looking after children? I certainly believe it is more positive in social terms in a two parent family to have one at home looking after children rather than two at work only in the pursuit of money. I have seen evidence of the welfare system actually encouraging women to break off with husband/boyfriend to claim this pension. In some circumstances this is necessary although not always.
There are many housing estates in western Sydney where only a fraction of people work and a majority are on single parent, disability or unemployment benefit. This is not a positive situation, especially for children growing up in these suburbs and I think it would be nieve to say our welfare system doesn't encourage situations like this. Welfare is an essential part of a fair society but it is not
all positive and we must try to find some kind of balance between fairness and welfare dependency, which probably makes people poorer and gives them lower self esteem.