ABSTRACT

The objective of securing a national minimum is a major consideration in the determination of benefit scales. In a social security system dominated by flat-rate benefits, as in Britain, this relation is particularly close. From the choices made about the level of benefits, it may be possible to make deductions about the objectives which lay behind them - a revealed preference argument - and it may be possible to learn from the expressed intentions of governments. The first half of this chapter provides a review of the considerations which appear to have influenced the determination of benefit scales at a national level in Britain. It covers pensions and National Insurance benefits since 1908 and the scales applied in a succession of national means-tested schemes dating from the Unemployment Assistance Board established in 1934.