Showing posts with label DPB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DPB. Show all posts

Friday, 6 March 2026

One member of every couple works just to pay the tax bill.

There was a time not that long ago when only one member of a family needed to go out to work. 

But that was several moons and many tax increases ago.

Now, one member of every couple goes out to work just to pay the tax bill.

Yet we still have the Sole Parent Support (SPS) benefit, known for decades as the DPB, aka the Domestic Purposes Benefit -- introduced in November 1973 for "sole parents, carers of the sick, and people living alone." 

In 1971, there were about 19,000 sole parent households with children under 15[1]. By the middle of 1974, 12,000 of them were receiving the DPB. There were 110,000 when it was replaced in 2013 with a suite of new benefits. (Politicians love to change a name instead of the reality; and a name-change always makes a thing easier to hide.) 

In today's world the DPB is, says Lindsay Mitchell, "an anachronism. It has lost context in modern society."

Why?

Because most mothers work. 

They take paid parental leave, which has a maximum entitlement of 6 months, and return to their jobs. Whether they want to would vary, but most would say they have to. Mortgages or rent need to be paid, power, groceries, childcare, etc....

22 percent of the mothers were supported by a benefit. For the vast majority, that would be Sole Parent Support. ... So the mothers returning to work - like it or not - will be paying taxes to enable other mothers to stay reliant for most of their newborn's childhood.

Fair?

...

Currently 234,000 children rely on welfare, with over two thirds on SPS.

If those children had a parent on a Jobseeker benefit, the expectation and effort to get their parent into employment would be far greater.

That's not just hot air. The reason Bennett got rid of the Sickness Benefit (in favour of Jobseeker/Health or Disability Condition) was to make sure 'expectation and effort' also went into getting temporarily unemployed unwell people back to work.

Societal expectations matter. And benefits should reflect them.

Get rid of the sole parent benefit. Lift aspirations for those mothers, and better outcomes for their children will follow.

Even better: get rid of all the costs from government that make it necessary for one partner to seek full-time employment just to pay the government's bills!

Tuesday, 21 October 2025

"New Zealand's unique welfare problem isn't disability or unemployment. ... It is the high rate of sole parenthood"

"New Zealand's unique welfare problem isn't disability or unemployment. ... It is the high rate of sole parenthood that sets us apart. ...

"The worst child abuse, neglect, deprivation, transience, non-preparedness for school, and later, absenteeism comes from fatherless families. These children spill through to non-achievement, gang membership, criminality and lives lost to prison and non-rehabilitation.

"Yes ... plenty of children survive. But compared to children from working, two parent families, their odds of success are heavily reduced.

"Minister for Social Development from 2008, Paula Bennett drove through some reforms. She actually got rid of the DPB. But then replaced it with the Sole Parent Payment. ... 2023 census data told us 70 percent of sole parents with dependent children receive welfare. By September 2024... there were 102,693. ...

"The number in September 2025 reached 234,000. With seasonal fluctuations the total could reach a quarter million by December.

"This country's propensity to put a soft-focus on hard problems is not working."
~ Lindsay Mitchell from her post 'National's problem epitomised'


Tuesday, 14 November 2023

50 years of welfare breaking up families

 

Welfare commentator Lindsay Mitchell reminds us that today marks the fiftieth anniversary of the one welfare measure responsible more than any other for supporting family break-up, and creating generations utterly dependent on largesse from the Welfare State.  In her measured words, 

the growth of the sole-parent family dependent on welfare has correlated with more poverty, more child abuse and more domestic violence. Each of these was intended to be reduced by the introduction of the DPB.

After fifty years, it's time to recognise that the opposite has happened. 

In 1966, in her summary

there were 922,349 dependent children under 16 years of age. 883,239 depended on married men or 96 percent of the total. A further two percent (19,829) depended on widows or widowers. The remainder had unmarried, separated, divorced (and not remarried) parents, or were orphans.

So, seven years before the DPB was introduced fewer than five percent of New Zealand children were in a one-parent situation. More than ninety-five percent of children lived in two-parent families.

After a "temporary" Domestic Purposes Emergency benefit was introduced by Holyoake's National Government, the Kirk Labour Government made it permanent, "having been hurried along by a National private member’s bill to the same effect." At the time, the new benefit barely even attracted any attention. But numbers soon exploded" 

'Children with a parent on DPB increased from 4% of all children under 18 in 1976, to 17% in 1991, and to 19% in 1996.”

And now: New Zealand has 1,123,500 children, 404,700 of whom , over a third of New Zealand's children, are living with a sole parent who is largely or wholly dependent on 'the benefit.' 

And "in the most deprived neighbourhoods," Lindsay notes, the percentage is much higher."

In the words of David McLoughlin, whom she quotes, the Domestic Purposes Benefit (DPB) has been a "disaster."

A temporary "emergency benefit," based on "need" was replaced with a permanent benefit based on a so-called entitlement, inviting -- nay, encouraging! -- generations to rely upon it as a way of life. Disastrous for them, for their offspring, and for those who pay their bills. And also for what some commentators refer to as "social cohesion." As Thomas Sowell reminds us:

“One of the consequences of such notions as ‘entitlements’ is that people who have contributed nothing to society feel that society owes them something, apparently just for being nice enough to grace us with their presence.”

And when thwarted, niceness can turn to anger. To deprivation and resentment. And to Entitle-itis -- including encouraging parents to split to increase their welfare income. (“'Perversely, because benefit eligibility reflected individual circumstances, and benefit rates and means testing were based on family income, many families were better off financially to separate.' One parent would claim the DPB while the other claimed the unemployment benefit.)"

Lindsay's post lays out the history of this most disastrous of welfare schemes, and today's tragic result of family break-up. Right now, she summarises:

  • Benefit-dependent single parents are on the rise again. 
    • They proliferate in emergency housing. 
    • Single parents have the lowest home ownership rates, and the highest debt-to-income ratios. 
  •  Police report that family violence is at record levels – 
    • single welfare-dependent females are the most vulnerable to partner violence, according to victim surveys. 
    • The correlation between substantiated child abuse and appearing in the benefit system is incredibly strong. 
  • Child poverty now drives both a public and private industry of people who claim to be helping to alleviate poverty. 
    • There are domestic child sponsorship programmes, KidsCan, Variety, etc. Forget famine-stricken African nations.
  • While benefits became more generous ... remaining obligations to the taxpayer became passé. 
    • There is no sign whatsoever that a resumption of deserving and non-deserving considerations will make a comeback. In fact, morality is ever more remote. 
    • Widows who become sole providers through no fault of their own are no longer differentiated from gang women who produce children as meal tickets. 
    • No distinction is made between reasons for ‘need’:the taxpayer is expected to like it or lump it, despite the fact that fifty years of trying to solve social problems with cash payments has only made them worse.
The DPB has changed its name, but not its outcomes -- which have only deteriorated. Despite that, there is zero pressure to change it, and no political courage anywhere to even reform it. "When reforms do occur," she concludes, quoting US commentator Charles Murray, "they will happen not because the stingy people have won, but because generous people have stopped kidding themselves.”

    >>READ LINDSAY'S WHOLE POST HERE.

Wednesday, 15 November 2017

Quote of the Day: On the real reason not to require DPB recipients to name the father


"So what is the real reason for the change [to not require DPB recipients to name the father]? It's the imposition of radical feminism whereby women's [alleged] rights are elevated above children's .... with the added bonus of screwing the taxpayer."
~ Lindsay Mitchell, from her post 'The ghost of Metiria and more lies'
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Friday, 16 September 2016

Quote of the Day: On welfare, parenting and the 30-million word gap

 

“Ironically one of the reasons the DPB was introduced was to allow sole mothers more time with their children. To reduce their stress and enable better parenting. Today it is known that maternal depression, welfare dependence and low literacy are all associated.”
~ Lindsay Mitchell on The genesis of the DPB and "The 30-million word gap"

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Wednesday, 17 August 2016

News from the welfare front

 

Lindsay Mitchell posts good news from the welfare front:

As the teenage birth rate plummets so do the numbers on welfare.
I would never have thought it possible for the numbers to drop this quickly in such a short time frame.
It's stunning.

See:

Beneficiaries under 20 with  child 2008 to 2016

So it’s not all doom and gloom out there, people.

.

Tuesday, 29 September 2015

Still paying no-hopers to breed

There is no polite way for me to say it. As taxpayers we are forced to pay no-hopers to breed.

And as welfare campaigner Lindsay Mitchell has made abundantly clear over the years (in language far more polite than I can muster here) the financial encouragement to breed has encouraged more breeding of increasing numbers of children with no hope and little future apart from one sucking off the state tit.

Indeed, why would we be surprised that child abuse, as she points out this morning, goes hand-in-glove with benefit abuse.

So given that context, why the uproar that Minister for Social Development Anne Tolley has belatedly begun talking about finding ways of stopping the most fertile beneficiaries from producing more unwanted children. “Unfortunately,” says Lindsay Mitchell, “Tolley is being somewhat timid.”

Every year, one in five children born will be benefit-dependent by the end of it.

In the 6 months to March 31, 2015, 6,347 babies were added to an existing benefit.

In that context Tolley's ambition looks lacking. But still upsetting for some.

Why on earth should it be? Why, if the welfare of women and NZ’s children were really important to them, should that number not “be applauding the Minister for at least  having the gumption to publicly ask why some women keep having babies when they are incapable of providing for them or worse.”

Why not?

Monday, 6 April 2009

The four 'drivers of crime'

Another week, another local talkfest. Last Friday it was the 'Drivers of Crime' talk fest, which predictably produced "a rambling of predictable, ineffective hot air," said Libertarianz Social Welfare Spokesman Peter Osborne, but nothing at all that looked directly at those drivers.

And the talk fest ended with predictable calls for more govermment intervention, ignoring just as carefully as conference-goers had the elephant in the talk-fest's room: that it is existing government intervention that is the primary driver of crime.  Osborne notes the top four:
  • Institutionalised welfare, particularly paying no-hopers to breed
  • The government's factory schools, which promote illiteracy, deny children real knowledge, and block the growth of youthful independence
  • The War on Drugs, which gives gangs an income
  • No explicit right to self defence, which gives every NZer a 'kick me' sign that even criminals can read: "Come get me, I'm defenceless."
The first two created the underclass; the second two give them the freedom to pillage.

The problem of is simple: too little clear-eyed thinking, and too much Government Cheese:


http://www.youtube.com/?v=t-HiXqqUItM