Logo

 

Banner Image:   National-News-banner-Purple
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet

Benefit cuts to change behaviour:  
unpopular, ineffective and immoral, say Churches 

Majority of UK adults believe benefits should be high enough to cover families’ basic costs


Major UK Churches are warning that the Government’s Welfare Reform and Work Bill marks a dangerous shift away from a core principle of the Welfare State and will make poor people even poorer.
 
A YouGov survey commissioned by the Churches has also revealed that 61 per cent of UK adults believe that welfare benefits should be set at a level that allows families with children to cover their basic costs.

In contrast, only 25 per cent of those polled said they thought that benefits should be set deliberately low to encourage families to find work or get more work.

The Churches’ report reveals that the Benefit Cap, which reduces families’ benefits by an average of over £3,500 per year, has only resulted in 4.7 per cent of families finding work. However, 46 per cent of families affected by the Cap experienced increasing problems with rent arrears.

This is despite the Government’s claims that reducing the amount of benefits people are entitled to is an effective way of moving people into work.  

'No child should be left without enough in order to motivate their parents,' said Paul Morrison, Public Issues Policy Adviser for the Methodist Church and author of the report.

'If children live in a family which doesn’t have enough money they are more likely to die young, do worse at school, and experience worse health. Many of these families are already in work and working very hard. Any policy that claims that taking £1,000 from a family will enhance the life-chances of its children, as the Bill does, is not only supremely questionable but morally flawed.'
 
The report, entitled "Enough: Our responsibility to meet families’ needs”, has been published by the Baptist Union, Church Action on Poverty, the Church of Scotland, the Methodist Church, Quakers in Britain, the Scottish Episcopal Church and the United Reformed Church, who together represent more than 840,000 people in Britain.
 
It highlights how the Bill threatens to undermine a founding principle of the welfare state: namely, that the amount families receive in benefits should be sufficient to meet their basic needs. The Churches say the Bill will break the link between what people need and the amount of support they can receive. Families with children will be hardest hit by this change.
 
'Fairness to the taxpayer should not be achieved at the expense of unfairness to children,' Mr Morrison continued. 'As Christians we believe all people are made in God’s image. We do not believe that we should ever deliberately deprive a person, a family, a child of enough to thrive or to fulfill their God-given potential. We are asking that the welfare state holds to its founding principles, and seeks to provide enough so that every child can have the best chance in life.'

 

People will soon be able to find out how different groups will be affected by the Welfare Reform and Work Bill online. The Churches are asking people to pray, to read and share the report and write to their MPs.

 

 

Baptist Times, 04/11/2015
    Post     Tweet
Assembly reflects on the mission resolution
Delegates at the 2026 Baptist Assembly paused to review and shape the evolving mission resolution, marking the second year of a three-year collaborative journey towards a shared understanding of mission
Detectives on a mission: children at the Baptist Assembly
Children were invited to step into the role of "Lost and Found Detectives" to explore the mission of Jesus at the Baptist Assembly
The Meeting of the Assembly
Messages from the General Secretary; finance updates; administrative resolutions - the Meeting of the Assembly took place on Friday afternoon
Stories round the campfire
Several stories and videos of how churches and people in the Northern Baptist Association (NBA) are connecting with their communities in imaginative ways were shared on Friday night at the Baptist Assembly
Urgency of the harvest – uniting in mission
Are we willing to seize the opportunity, shake off distractions and take advantage of this ‘Kairos moment’ of increased spiritual openness? That was the challenge shared by Leone Martin, who preached on Luke 10:1-24 during the Sunday morning sermon
Annual Returns encouragements; ‘make space for God to speak and move’
General Secretary Lynn Green highlighted areas of growth (and decline) in the latest Annual Returns, as well as encouraging Baptists to continue to make room for God to speak and lead us into His new thing
     Latest News 
    Posted: 22/05/2026
    Posted: 21/05/2026
    Posted: 27/03/2026
    Posted: 25/11/2025
    Posted: 29/07/2025
     
    Text Size:  
    Small (Default)
    Medium
    Large
    Contrast:  
    Normal
    High Contrast