Written answers

Thursday, 6 October 2016

Department of Social Protection

Social Welfare Rates

Photo of Gino KennyGino Kenny (Dublin Mid West, People Before Profit Alliance)
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47. To ask the Minister for Social Protection if he will reverse the discriminatory cuts to social protection payments to young adults under 25 years of age; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [28733/16]

Photo of Leo VaradkarLeo Varadkar (Dublin West, Fine Gael)
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Reduced rates for younger jobseeker’s allowance recipients were first introduced in 2009 and were further extended in subsequent budgets and apply to jobseekers under 26 years of age.

These measures were introduced as they were considered to protect young people from welfare dependency by providing young jobseekers with a strong financial incentive to engage in education or training or to take up employment. Should a young jobseeker on a reduced jobseeker’s allowance payment participate on an education or training programme they will receive a higher weekly payment of €160.

Youth unemployment rose rapidly in the recession to over 30% in 2012. According to the Quarterly National Household Survey for Quarter 2 2016, youth unemployment fell by 3.4% to 19% as compared to Quarter 2 2015.

The Youth Guarantee sets a medium-term objective of ensuring that all young people receive an offer of employment within four months of becoming unemployed. The main plank of the guarantee is assistance to young people in finding and securing sustainable jobs, through earlier and enhanced engagement processes.

Reserved places on a number of programmes and youth-oriented variants of existing schemes have also been rolled out. Overall, young people took up just over 19,000 Youth Guarantee-related programme places in 2015. These numbers exclude an estimated 24,000 places provided for young people through PLC courses and apprenticeships.

Other EU and OECD countries adopt a similar targeted approach in terms of young jobseekers receiving a reduced social welfare payment. The aim is to encourage and support our young people to engage in education and training in order to reduce the risk that they may drift into welfare dependency. For obvious reasons this needs to be avoided as welfare dependency will have severe long term consequences for those affected and for the economy as a whole.

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