Commodification, disabled people, and wage work in Britain

Authors

  • Chris Grover Senior Lecturer in Social Policy, Centre for Disability Research Lancaster University, UK

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15353/cjds.v4i2.211

Keywords:

Commodification, Disabled People, Employment Services, Markets, Reserve Army, Social Security, Wage Work

Abstract

This paper focuses upon the development in Britain of a new out-of-work benefit, the Employment and Support Allowance —and a new employment service intervention (the Work Programme) which is supposed to support groups described as ‘hard-to-help’ people (one of which is disabled people) into wage work. The paper examines the ways in which such a combination of social security and labour market policies can be understood in political economic terms. The paper uses a theoretical framework drawing upon the ideas of commodification and proletarianizsation to argue that, rather than being concerned with the economic position of disabled people in Britain, the development of the Employment and Support Allowance and the Work Programme was concerned with relationships between the supply of labour and wage inflation, and with developing new welfare (quasi) markets in employment services. The paper concludes that attempting to address the economic disadvantages disabled people face through what are essentially market mechanisms will entrench, rather than address, those disadvantages.

Author Biography

Chris Grover, Senior Lecturer in Social Policy, Centre for Disability Research Lancaster University, UK

Senior Lecturer in Social Policy, Centre for Disability Research
Lancaster University, UK

How to Cite

Grover, C. (2015). Commodification, disabled people, and wage work in Britain. Canadian Journal of Disability Studies, 4(2), 106–131. https://doi.org/10.15353/cjds.v4i2.211

Issue

Section

Articles