Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- One The transformation of the welfare state? The Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition government and social policy
- Two The coalition government, public spending and social policy
- Three The changing governance of social policy
- Four The coalition, social policy and public opinion
- Five Health policy and the coalition government
- Six The coalition government, the general election and the policy ratchet in education: a reflection on the ‘ghosts’ of policy past, present and yet to come
- Seven Coalition housing policy in England
- Eight Social security under the coalition and Conservatives: shredding the system for people of working age; privileging pensioners
- Nine Welfare and active labour market policies in the UK: the coalition government approach
- Ten ‘It ain’t what you do, it’s the way that you do it’: adult social care under the coalition
- Eleven Family policy: the Mods and Rockers
- Twelve One step forward, two steps back: children, young people and the Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition
- Thirteen The coalition and criminal justice
- Fourteen Equalities: the impact of welfare reform and austerity by gender, disability and age
- Fifteen Social policy, the devolved administrations and the UK coalition government
- Sixteen Conclusions
- Index
Fourteen - Equalities: the impact of welfare reform and austerity by gender, disability and age
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 September 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- One The transformation of the welfare state? The Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition government and social policy
- Two The coalition government, public spending and social policy
- Three The changing governance of social policy
- Four The coalition, social policy and public opinion
- Five Health policy and the coalition government
- Six The coalition government, the general election and the policy ratchet in education: a reflection on the ‘ghosts’ of policy past, present and yet to come
- Seven Coalition housing policy in England
- Eight Social security under the coalition and Conservatives: shredding the system for people of working age; privileging pensioners
- Nine Welfare and active labour market policies in the UK: the coalition government approach
- Ten ‘It ain’t what you do, it’s the way that you do it’: adult social care under the coalition
- Eleven Family policy: the Mods and Rockers
- Twelve One step forward, two steps back: children, young people and the Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition
- Thirteen The coalition and criminal justice
- Fourteen Equalities: the impact of welfare reform and austerity by gender, disability and age
- Fifteen Social policy, the devolved administrations and the UK coalition government
- Sixteen Conclusions
- Index
Summary
Introduction
As is widely discussed in this book, policies under the post-2010 Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition government were dominated by the spectre of the 2008 private sector financial crisis, which by 2010, had turned into a global recession, reducing economic production and seeing rises in unemployment. The UK, in common with other G20 countries, initially adopted a fiscal stimulus approach (quantitative easing), which slowed the recession but led to a sharp rise in the budget deficit, to 11.6% in 2009/10 (ONS, 2010), the highest since 1945. What had started out as a private financial crisis was very quickly turned into a crisis of public policy, particularly in countries such as Ireland and Greece, which found it difficult to borrow money at preferential rates to service their growing deficits.
The coalition government that came to power in 2010 took the position that addressing the deficit was an economic necessity, and social policy therefore followed this aim (see Chapter Two). The primary mechanism used to achieve this was cuts to public expenditure – a policy paradigm that has come to be known as ‘austerity’. The 2010 Comprehensive Spending Review detailed how these cuts would be distributed across departments (see Table 14.1).
However, simply examining the scale of the cuts by department masks the fact that they fell disproportionately on certain groups of people. Those dependent on the state for a proportion or the whole of their income were more affected by the changes than the average: while an estimated 21% of people in the UK are living in poverty, they are bearing the brunt of 39% of the funding cuts. Moreover, over half the cuts fell on social security and local government, despite them making up only 27% of central government expenditure – and 60% of local government expenditure goes on social care for children and adults (Duffy, 2013). The purpose of this chapter is to examine the impact that this paradigm and the policies introduced by the coalition government had on four groups of people who are at risk of inequality, poverty and social exclusion: women, working-age disabled people, older people and young children. Data were not easily available to assess the impact of policies on people from minority ethnic groups, but, where possible, the cumulative impact of intersectionality, that is, where equalities issues such as gender, disability, age and ethnicity intersect, is discussed.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Coalition Government and Social PolicyRestructuring the Welfare State, pp. 309 - 324Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2016