Orca "Choosing not to work" is very contentious when unemployment is high. Particularly for those with low skills and little experience.
Say you have two under fives partner has gone, died or whatever. You live in a rural area with few jobs locally. If you want to work you have to be able to earn enough to be better off. Afford transport to work and pay for child care etc.
I live in a small town but there is very little work here it would be about 6 and 10 miles to the nearest towns accessible by public transport.
There is a big group of retail distribution centers about 10miles way in another direction and you cannot get there without your own transport. There is no direct public transport which is viable in area like this. Pay is low and very early shift hours would add to child care problems. And we still want the food they package delivered cheaply to our supermarket shelves.
You also need job permanence as moving from employment back to benefit or even changing hours seems to cause no end of problems in getting tax credits etc sorted out. I have known families stuck with no income for a couple of weeks at at a time while state support is being recalculated.
If you were on temporary or part time work at the basic national wage level you have no chance of saving money.
So do you risk the trouble of taking short term jobs which can cause so much more stress or yourself and your family, or stay on benefit so you can continue to look after your children and feed them each week.
Look what trouble some of our well experienced GNers have had recently trying to get a job and they have not had to consider how to manage childcare.
It is factors like these that really make it difficult for anyone on low income to make any choice about working that is sound economically. Which factors the government rhetoric fails to recognise.
Tuchel urges parents to let kids stay up for England game
Only 50% of middle age adult manage more than 1 brisk 10 min walk a month.


