MAJORITY REPORT.
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equivalents for this purpose. The relief to the insurance funds
thus resulting is allowed for in the actuarial calculation of the
contribution. The system appears to work well and has the
feature that it continues to place upon the employers the full
financial responsibility for industrial accident and disease.
MAINTENANCE OF THE POOR.
50. Turning to the maintenance aspect of the Poor Law, we
have had evidence as to the supplementing of the cash benefits
under the National Health Insurance Scheme by Poor Liaw relief.
The Scottish Board of Health submitted a statement showing
the numbers of persons in certain industrial parishes who applied
for Poor Relief to supplement National Health Insurance Benefit
and other resources, and stated that, from information based
on the Census records, ‘‘ The indications are that for both sexes,
59 per cent., and for men, 73 per cent., of the insured persons
drawing benefit applied for poor relief (App. CV, 51).
The evidence furnished to us by the Ministry of Health indicates
that while ‘‘ no records are available of the number of applicants
for, or recipients of, Poor Law relief who are insured persons, it
can only be stated that the proportion must be a substantial one.’’
The evidence from this quarter also indicates that in the two
Boroughs of Reading and Halifax it was reported that 9'3 per
cent. and 3'4 per cent. respectively of the persons in receipt of
Health Insurance Benefit on a certain date were also in receipt
of Outdoor Relief (Appendix CIV, 69). The Association of Poor
Law Unions of England and Wales informed us that an
insured person in receipt of sickness benefit comes to the
Guardians for help simply because he has some dependants. He
1s thrown out of work and there is nothing coming in except his
sickness or disablement benefit. In a case like that they are
bound to come for Poor Law assistance unless they have some
other resources *’ (Q. 21,673).
51. This evidence raises the fundamental principle involved
in the question whether these benefits should be adequate for
maintenance, or whether their supplementation by private
Insurance in the case of the provident and by the Poor Law in
the case of the thriftless or unfortunate is to be regarded as a
permanent and desirable element in the system. The present
rate of 7s. 6d. a week for disablement benefit is obviously
not sufficient for the maintenance even of the single man. Tt was
probably never intended to be, but was merely a basic sum such
as the contribution could provide, giving an assured though small
weekly payment which could be supplemented by private
savings, voluntary insurance, and in other ways. The sickness
benefit of 15s. is very near the margin for the single man and
insufficient for the man with dependants. Tt is true that the
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