There is nothing objectionable in the Government's proposed new way of handling young beneficiaries and school dropouts. A commendable carrot-and-stick approach is identifiable in the plan to support every at-risk high school dropout into training and restrict the spending habits of teenage beneficiaries. Yet there is also nothing in the
Editorial: Job creation lacking in PM's policy
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WINZ office in Tokoroa. Photo / Greg Bowker
Identifying at-risk school-leavers is overdue, as is the linking of them with support services, which will receive bonuses if they place them in work or mentor them through a training programme. The danger that these services may focus on easier cases is real, but hardly a reason to query the policy's feasibility.
The most controversy has been raised by a plan to control the spending habits of teenage beneficiaries. The Government would pay essentials such as rent and power on their behalf, and provide a pre-loaded and monitored payment card that could be used for food but not to buy liquor and cigarettes. Such restraint on spending seems fair enough when those affected are under 18 and often vulnerable. Only if applied to those of an older age would it represent an unreasonable intrusion.
But all this will go only so far if young people are starved of job opportunities. By the time the Government, if re-elected, introduces legislation to implement this proposal early next year, it should also have devised a strategy for real job creation. Given the country's teenage unemployment statistics, nothing else will suffice.