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Political Theology 4: Property
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 April 2024
Extract
In the course of an unusually angry article on poverty in Northern Ireland which appeared in the Times of 18 March this year, it was pointed out that in a region already suffering the highest cost of living, the highest unemployment rate (17.3 per cent) and the worst housing shortage (32,000 families homeless) in the United Kingdom, the social security system is passive and waits for people to find out what benefits they might be entitled to and to claim them. Moreover, the claim forms are “impenetrable to all but the well-educated and practised claimant, a contradiction in terms”. And the fear of scrounging has seriously interfered with the system’s ability to meet the crying need. In the UK as a whole £500 million welfare benefits remained unclaimed in 1978. Ulster was well represented. Meanwhile, the Government is pouring the balance of £70 million into a factory making luxury sports cars for the American market in the middle of a world energy crisis, for the sake of 1000 jobs.
On 6 April, the Guardian reported that more than 1000 new investigators have been appointed to save an estimated £50 million in social security frauds, while at the same time it has reduced the staff of the Inland Revenue and Customs and Excise dealing with tax frauds, which cost about £5,500 million. As the number of security fraud officers is increased so less and less time is given by benefit officers to ensuring that claimants receive their full entitlement. And more and more people are frightened to seek their legal rights. Moreover, “home visits have been reduced and officers have been told not to help claimants to work out the intricacies of various benefits in order to decide which was the most advantageous”. Meanwhile, it is not known what arrangements the Inland Revenue have to reclaim the vast tax arrears of the Vestey business empire, which paid no tax for decades on its highly profitable chain of butcher’s shops.
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- Copyright © 1981 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers
References
1 The Political Theory of Possessive Individualism, Oxford 1962. Property (A collection of texts, ed. Macpherson), Oxford 1978. “Capitalism and the Changing Concept of Property”, in Feudalism, Capitalism and Beyond, ed. Kamenka and Neals, London 1975.
2 In “Capitalism etc”. p 111, 109.
3 “The Natural Right of Investment” in Property, Macpherson (Ed.) p 130.
4 The Sickness of an Acquisitive Society, 1920, chap v in Macpherson, Property, p 149.
5 Brian, Tierney, Medieval Poor Law, Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1959. chap II on Property.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6 Op. Cit. p 140.