Poverty And Benefit Dependency

Author: David Green

Stock information

General Fields

  • : $110.00 AUD
  • : 9781877148712
  • : New Zealand Business Roundtable
  • : New Zealand Business Roundtable
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  • : 01 July 2001
  • : 160x240mm
  • : New Zealand
  • : 110.0
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  • : books

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  • : David Green
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  • : Paperback
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  • : 107
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Barcode 9781877148712
9781877148712

Local Description

2001, First edition. A fine, unmarked copy. Scans available if required.

Description

In his book "Poverty and Benefit Dependency" Dr David Green undertakes two main tasks. First, he examines the claims of those who analyse recent social changes using concepts such as poverty and social exclusion. He points out that reaching valid conclusions about trends in poverty is no simple matter. Measures of poverty based on a percentage of median income are unsatisfactory. Expenditure better reflects people's standards of living, but more accurate still is a consumption measure that includes government-provided goods and services. Dr Green goes on to argue that a more fundamental objection to many studies of poverty is that they divert attention from the more serious underlying problem - that of welfare dependency and the attitudes it reflects, not least the diminution of personal responsibility. "Poverty and Benefit Dependency" looks at the poverty debate from an historical and international perspective, including recent welfare reforms in New Zealand and the United States. The author concludes that the claims of many poverty lobbies are not valid and that the key issue for policy is how society can best assist its least fortunate members without causing welfare dependency. He outlines the approaches to overcoming the dependency problem.