1 / 15

Lesson Starter

Lesson Starter. Can you remember the Five Giants of poverty? Write them down- without looking back at your notes! What is meant by the term ‘welfare state?’. What will I learn?. To define what is meant by the term ‘welfare state’.

dsapp
Download Presentation

Lesson Starter

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lesson Starter Can you remember the Five Giants of poverty? Write them down- without looking back at your notes! What is meant by the term ‘welfare state?’

  2. What will I learn? To definewhat is meant by the term ‘welfare state’. To understandthe reasons why the UK adopted a welfare state . To explain and give examples of the Five Giants. To understand the founding principles of the Welfare State.

  3. Success Criteria Define the term ‘welfare state’. Explain the background to the creation of the welfare state. List and describe the Beveridge’s Five Giants. Outline the founding principles of the welfare state.

  4. What is a Welfare State? ‘A ‘welfare state’ is a system under which the government takes on responsibility for providing social and economic security for the population by means of pensions, social security benefits, free health care and free education. The government provides for people in times of need.

  5. Founding Principles of the Welfare State The British Welfare State was set up after 1945 to tackle the terrible poverty of that time. It was based on the findings of a report published by academic William Beveridge. The Beveridge Report of 1942 stated that social welfare in the UK should tackle the five “Giant Evils” of Want, Disease, Ignorance, Squalor and Idleness.

  6. Individualist or Collectivist? Prefer private providers of health, education. An individual seems to be responsible for their situation, for example by smoking, drinking too much or eating a poor diet, they argue that this is caused by poor life chances. They believe that the ‘nanny state’ is expensive and inefficient. Public Private Finance. Smoking ban, free prescriptions, minimum pricing on alcohol.

  7. Founding Principles of the Welfare State To tackle the five ‘Giant Evils’ the Beveridge Report called for: • Universal benefits that would cover old age, unemployment and sickness • A comprehensive health service • Vastly expanded public sector housing • Free and universal secondary education • Full employment

  8. Founding Principles of the Welfare State The Welfare State was based on four principles. It was to be: • Collectivist • Universal • Comprehensive • Equal • Provide a service from the ‘cradle to the grave’

  9. Collectivist • The state would fund the services needed. • Raise funds through NI contributions. • The treasury decides the level of pensions and benefits and succeeding governments decide on the levels of investment. • People on the right of the political spectrum believe that too much money is spent on the NHS and dislike high taxation. Prefer Individualist approach. • People on the left believe that the NHS does not do enough to help vulnerable groups such as women and ethnic minorities.

  10. Universal • Provide a range of services for the whole population that was free at the point of need. Mostly remained this way. • However not applied across all provisions- charges for dental care, prescriptions (England)etc.

  11. Comprehensive • The state would undertake to provide for all aspects of need. • Slay the five giants. • Improve health- NHS was taking responsibility for all aspects of the nation’s health care. • Tackling poverty- providing a challenge in the current economic climate. • Therefore not as comprehensive as Beveridge intended.

  12. Equal • The aim of the Welfare State for equal provision for all people in all regions and areas. • However ‘post-code’ lottery of services. • Homework: • Look up a news story which relates to changes to the Welfare State.

  13. Founding Principles of the Welfare State Devised in the 1940s, the Welfare State was once held up as a model for other countries. The UK’s comprehensive system aimed for ‘cradle to grave’ social protection. Its founding principles of universal provision and flat rate contributions were widely praised. But its principles were never fully realised. Over time, other countries have produced more comprehensive welfare systems which have proved better at tackling poverty.

  14. Group Activity How relevant is the welfare state today? In each box, brainstorm ideas which suggest that the principles of the Welfare State haven't been fully met.

  15. I can… Definewhat is meant by the term ‘welfare state’. Understandthe reasons why the UK adopted a welfare state . Explain and give examples of the Five Giants. Understand the founding principles of the Welfare State.

More Related