Past experience suggests that adding work requirements to Medicaid will strip health services from millions of American without increasing employment.
Left is Netherlands leader, Geert Wilders, whose Party for Freedom won national elections last year and who argues that immigrants are ‘pampered.’ On the right is U.S. President Donald Trump, who recently signed anti-immigration legislation.
(CP PHOTOS/college by TC)
Many political debates about immigration and the welfare of immigrants are not accompanied by facts. A new data set can help with that.
London’s Trellick Tower, designed by Hungarian-born architect Ernő Goldfinger. Like László Tóth in The Brutalist, his designs reflected a radical architectural vision shaped by European modernism.
Gleb Redko
A trauma-informed approach could be life-changing for a wide range of vulnerable claimants – not just veterans.
The Conservatives’ manifesto relies on efficiency savings, welfare cuts and a crackdown on tax evasion.
Benjamin Cremel/Associated Press/Alamy Stock Photo
Tax evasion crackdowns, efficiency savings and welfare cuts are easy political sells – but getting these measures to deliver large amounts of revenue is much more difficult.
The pandemic has made work more precarious and wages stagnate, while the cost of living has soared.
NurPhoto SRL/Alamy
The extreme levels of poverty endured by economically inactive people (as highlighted in the government’s own data) are a direct result of deliberate political choices to continually erode benefits.
The welfare state was designed around male financial responsibility for their families.
Stephen Dorey|Alamy
In the 1940s, Britain’s nascent welfare state was designed around male financial responsibility for their families – unmarried mothers were intentionally disregarded.
You may feel little sympathy for people in the top bracket of earnings, but don’t let that stop you reading. Like it or not, their views and actions matter to everyone
Autistic people often don’t receive the correct healthcare to meet their needs.
toodtuphoto/Shutterstock
Brenda Matthews’ story is a truth-seeking quest to right the wrongs perpetrated by a government hell-bent on doing ‘as they saw fit’ when it came to Aboriginal peoples, writes Sandra Phillips.
Prioritising economic growth without a plan to curb exploitative business practices is not a solution. The UK needs a return to the forward-thinking social reforms of 1945.
Labor MP Daniel Mulino argues that the capacity of the state to undertake income redistribution has reached its limits, but that the need for social insurance continues to grow.