Unemployed youngsters should be stripped of out-of-work benefits unless they agree to training in vital skills, Labour leader Ed Miliband says.
Bidding to counter Tory jibes that Labour is the “party of welfare”, Mr Miliband called for 18 to 21 year olds to be given a “youth allowance” rather than out-of-work benefits.
But the money will be conditional on them signing up to learn key skills – and they will not get it if their parents are relatively well off. People will also have to work longer to qualify for a boosted rate of Jobseeker’s Allowance, as part of moves to restore the contributory principle to the system.
The commitments, unveiled in a speech to the IPPR think-tank, come with Mr Miliband facing persistent questions about his leadership with under a year to go until the general election.
His personal ratings have been lagging significantly behind those of David Cameron, while a recent poll found voters thought his brother David would make a better prime minister.
Stressing Labour’s devotion to fiscal discipline in his speech this morning, Mr Miliband promised “big changes, not big spending”.
“We can’t just hope to make do and mend and we can’t just borrow and spend money to paper over the cracks,” he will say.
Labour would increase the rate of contributory Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA) for people who had spent significant time in work before becoming unemployed.
But to fund a mooted rise from £71 to £100 a week, the period of employment needed to qualify would be extended – potentially from two to five years.
“It is a principle deeply felt by the British people that people should get something back for all they have put in and not get something for nothing,” Mr Miliband said.
“The next Labour government will change the way JSA operates to make sure that someone who has been working for years and years and paying in to the system gets more help if they lose their job than someone who has been working for just a couple of years.
“And we will pay for it not by spending more money in the social security system overall, but by extending the length of time people need to have worked to qualify.”
Mr Cameron has already suggested barring under 25s from receiving any benefits unless they are “earning or learning” – but Labour has dismissed the pledge as too blunt an instrument and lacking detail.
Instead Mr Miliband will back IPPR proposals to scrap out-of-work benefits for those aged 18-21 and replace them with a “youth allowance” of the same value – currently around £57 a week.
They will not get the money if their skills are considered inadequate and they refuse to sign up for training, or if their parents’ income is too high. People with small children or disabilities will be exempted from the rules.
There was speculation that Labour would endorse a similar scheme from the IPPR before Christmas, which would have made benefits conditional up to the age of 25. But party sources said its Jobs Guarantee scheme made such a move unnecessary.
That policy would see 18 to 24 year olds who have been unemployed for a year offered a taxpayer-funded job for six months, with those who refuse losing benefits.
The sources indicated that those receiving “youth allowance” but still looking for work will still be eligible for the Jobs Guarantee scheme after a year.
Conservative Party chairman Grant Shapps said: “This is just a recipe for more spending on welfare, more borrowing – and more taxes to pay for it. That’s exactly how Labour got us into a mess in the first place.
“Ed Miliband has no economic plan. All he offers is more of the same old Labour, and Britain would have a less secure future as a result.”
Lord Mandelson: Miliband is 'the leader we have'
On Wednesday night Lord Mandelson appeared to offer only lukewarm support, saying only that Mr Miliband was "the leader we have".
Asked on the BBC's Newsnight whether Mr Miliband was the best leader the party could have, Lord Mandelson replied: "In my view he is the leader we have and therefore the leader I support, and somebody who I believe is capable of leading the party to victory."
He said Mr Miliband was "choosing a different course" from ex-prime minister Tony Blair, adding that it "may work".
"What Ed is trying to do is approach politics in a rather different way from the way in which Tony Blair and New Labour approached it," Lord Mandelson said.
"It may work. It may well be successful. I would say to you that electoral arithematic is probably on his side."