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In his famous report of 1942, the economist and social reformer
William Beveridgewrote that the war was a 'revolutionary moment in
the world's history' and so a time 'forrevolutions, not for
patching.' The Beveridge Report outlined the welfare state that
Attlee'sgovernment would go on to implement after 1946,
instituting, for the first time, a nationalsystem of benefits to
protect all from 'cradle to the grave.' Since then the welfare
system hasbeen patched, beset by muddled thinking and
short-termism. The government spends overGBP171bn a year on welfare
and yet, since the Beveridge Report, there has been no
strategicreview of the system. Compare that to Defence which, with
its comparatively small budgetof GBP35bn, is subject to a strategic
review at least every decade. Reform of the welfare systemneed not
mean dismantlement, but serious questions must be asked about how a
welfarestate as we understand it remains sustainable into the 21st
century.
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