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465501
Liberal Reforms
Description
How effective were the liberal social welfare reforms 1906 - 1914 ?
No tags specified
higher
history
s5
history
s5
higher
Mind Map by
Katie Bryden
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
Katie Bryden
almost 11 years ago
Copied by
Katie Bryden
almost 11 years ago
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Resource summary
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
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