Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Britain - Cradle to the Grave
- Attitudes towards poverty 1 - Victorians
- people
- self help by Samuel Smiles
- If people were in poverty /
poor they we classes as
- bad christians
- wasting money on
gambling, prostitution
and / or alcohol
- ignorant and lazy
- wasted money rather than saving
- Government
- Laissez faire
- old liberals
- Henry Campbell
- Bannerman - prime minister
- law
- poor law
- indoor relief
- poor/ work house
- outdoor relief
- in your own home
- provision was very meagre (very little)
- they wanted to make sure
you were sufficiently poor
to merit aid (to get help)
- to deter people
- stigma of applying
- Attitudes towards poverty 2 - Changing
- Charities
- swamped and tried
to convince people
to take action
- National Security
- Boer War showed Britain could scarcely protect
her empire after 3 years of war against farmers
- In some places 2/3 of recruits were unfit or malnorished
- National Efficiency
- government worried
because British workforce
was unfit and malnorished
- Countries such as Germany,
America and Japan were over
taking Britain ecconomically
- Soup kitchens
- Dr Margret
MacMillan and
Fred Jowett
(both
socialists) used
rates illegally
to feed
malnourished
school children
- after they noticed they were falling
asleep or not concentrating in class
- Political Concerns
- Internally
- New Liberals like Winston Churchill and David
Lloyd-George advocated state intervention
- influenced by social
reforms in Germany
and New Zealand
- Externallly
- Rise of Labour Party
- Harness
working
class votes
- Conservatives
- threatened
introduction of
social reform
- steal votes from Liberals
- Socialists
- intellectual groups like the Fabien
Society and those helping the poor
argued, loudly for government
intervention
- Investigations
- Social
- Charles Booth
- London
- 30%
- Seebohm Rowntree
- York
- 27%
- Royal Commission
- ordered after Boer War
- free school meals
- Liberal Reforms
- Children
- 1906
Education(provision of
school meals) act
- problems
- Voluntary
- some councils could not afford it
- some councils did
not believe in it
- socialism
- 1907 Education
(Administrative
Provisions) act
- introduced 3x medical
inspections in school career
- problems
- they identified what was
wrong but not treated
- 1908 a group of acts called the
'Children's Charter'
- banned children buying
alcohol and cigarettes
- Juvenile Coarts
- burstals
- prevents falling to heavy crime
- abuse inspections
- physical, sexual, abandonment
- Employed (all didn't effect enough people/workers)
- Workman's Compensation paid
when injured or compensation
for loss of life or limb
- Mines act set 8 hour
working day and
minimum wage
- problems
- strikes in WW1 abandoned
hours and pay conditions for
war effort
- Trades Board Act sweated trades -
laundry, tailor, seamstress/dressmaker,
lace worker
- Reginal Boards set pay and
conditions
- problems
- different pay and
conditions in every region
- Elderly
- Old age pension act 1908
- kept many people out of poor/work houses
- collected from post
office so no stigma
attached
- helped a large
number of elderly
- taxes paid for scheme so poor people did
not have to make a contribution and push
them deeper in to poverty
- problems
- had to be 70 to qualify -
many did not live to this
age (average age 55)
- rich people objected to their taxes being used for this
- limitations were if you had been in
jail, the sanatorium, abroad for too
much time then you did not qualify
- amounts paid were
much lower than
suggested by Rowntree
- Sick
- National Insurance act (part I)
- provided medical attention
- paid for 26weeks - half and half - first
13 they got full pay(10) then half (5)
for the second 13 weeks
- maternity grant for
the first time ever
- problems
- only covered the person
paying stamp but not their
family members
- only people with
TB got
hospitalised
- seasonal workers couldn't
pay enough stamps
- contributions
pushed workers
further into
poverty
- Unemployed
- Labour Exchanges
- employers and
workers could go
to the same place
- could mend and wash clothes
- 414 by 1911
- problems
- not
compulsory to
advertise jobs
- did not help -seasonal
workers, specialist
workers(engineers,
masons)
- National Insurance act (part II)
- provided unemployment payments regularly
- contributions from worker - so he felt he was paying his way
- employer protecting their worker for the first time
- government replaced inadequate poor
law for those workers covered
- problems
- did not cover enough workers - 7 trades
- contributions pushed
poorer workers into poverty
- did not cover seasonal workers
- did not cover workers for long enough
- Effects of the war
- rationing
- equality in food and distribution
- poor people became more healthy
- some had more to eat
- better food
- rich ate what the poor ate
- government introduced more
education on sanitation, pregnancy,
contraception and nutrition
- housing
- every one "mucked in" to
help when houses were
bombed
- bombs did not discriminate between the
classes neither did those who helped
- rich classes could see the conditions of the poor
- war government introduced universal free milk for
primary children
- Classes mixed in together
- war duties
- shelters
- land armys
- people of all classes shared experiences and gained
greater awareness of each other's lifestyles and needs
- Armed forces
- men of all classes working together and gaining greater
awareness of what should be done after the war is over
- this time they would create a new Britain unlike the
false promises of WW1 "Home fit for hero's"
- Beveridge report made
lots of recommendations
to the government to
improve life after the war
- government (mainly tories) published white papers on how to improve social conditions after the war
- education plans of Tony R.A. Butler were introduced in1944
but implement by Labour in 1945
- Social Investigations
- Booth
- book published "life and
labour of the people in
London"
- poverty line
- 30% of all people in poverty
- poverty in London
- Rowntree
- showed poverty was widespread
- primary poverty - used to describe those
whose earnings were so low they could not
survive on them alone
- 1/3 of people living in
town in poverty
- York
- secondary poverty - used to describe
those whose earnings were enough to
live on but who spend money in a
wasteful way
- cycle of poverty
- Royal Cmmision