There have been two letters to the Irish Times from employers experiencing issues with employing people. On Monday, a guy opening a new restaurant received 400 applications - but only five were Irish - and the the five Irish were full time students. Today, the owner of an SME describes his search for a semi-skilled employee on 28K + company van + overtime - he got 200 applications and, separately, offered the job to two people, both of whom had been out of work for more than two years. Both said they would take the job but then turned it down saying they were better off on social welfare with rent allowance etc. - even taking account of the back to work allowance.
In my view, this is just wrong - benefits shouldn't discourage people from accepting a reasonable job offer. It's hard to blame the people themselves - when the choice is less money plus time away from home/family vs. more money plus all day at home/with family - who wouldn't make that choice? The system is wrong when this happens - and it makes perpetuating the out-of-work cycle more likely - children will grow up in a home where there is no-one working - so the norm becomes 'sit at home and get state money' - they will have known nothing else.
In my view, this is just wrong - benefits shouldn't discourage people from accepting a reasonable job offer. It's hard to blame the people themselves - when the choice is less money plus time away from home/family vs. more money plus all day at home/with family - who wouldn't make that choice? The system is wrong when this happens - and it makes perpetuating the out-of-work cycle more likely - children will grow up in a home where there is no-one working - so the norm becomes 'sit at home and get state money' - they will have known nothing else.