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Liberal Reforms 1906-1914Reforms to help the unemployed

In 1906 to 1914 the Liberal Government passed reforms to help reduce poverty. Legislation included the introduction of old age pensions, free school meals, National Insurance and labour exchanges.

Part of HistoryThe making of modern Britain (1880-1951)

Reforms to help the unemployed

Labour Exchanges Act 1909

The successes of this were:

  • there were offices to help the unemployed find work
  • by 1913, 430 labour exchanges were operating
  • by 1914, 3,000 people a day were being provided with work

The limitations of this were:

  • it was not compulsory for employers to register vacancies
  • it was also criticised for only finding temporary and low paid work, so did not reduce poverty

National Insurance Act (Part 2) 1911

The successes of this were:

  • after one week, an insured worker losing their job would receive 7 shillings a week, for 15 weeks
  • to receive this - workers paid 2.5d per week, employers paid 2d per week, state paid 3d per week
  • many trades were involved, e.g. shipbuilding, mechanical engineering, construction, iron founding, sawmilling - the scheme was compulsory for these trades.

The limitations of this were:

  • cover was only provided for a limited time depending on contributions - after this, the Poor Law had to be used
  • if the worker was fired for bad conduct, no benefit was provided
  • there was no provision for the worker鈥檚 family
  • insurance was only available in certain trades and only insured about 2 million workers
  • it became too expensive for the Government after World War One

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