As India prepares to roll out the worlds largest welfare scheme,with the food security Bill aiming to reach out to nearly two-thirds of the population or 800 million people,a look at how welfare stacks up
UNITED STATES: LAND OF THE FREE
Record numbers of American citizens are now on some form of government assistance.
* $1 trillion a year: Amount taxpayers have to cough up to fund more than 120 welfare
programmes.
* 100 million: Roughly one third of the US population subsists on aid.
* $20,610: Amount in benefits received by a poor person in the US per year.
* Medicaid: Biggest expenditure guzzler among the USs social safety nets.
* Food stamps: Next highest expenditure is on food stamps. Costs for this have doubled since 2008.
* $15 trillion: Total welfare spending since 1964s War on Poverty. More than 46 million people continue to live in poverty.
SOUTH AFRICA: WELFARE BUBBLE
South Africa is Africas biggest welfare state. However,recent revelations that more people receive welfare than have jobs have rocked the welfare boat.
* According to World Bank,social assistance typically represents 1-2 per cent of GDP in developing countries. In SA,its 3.4 per cent.
* 16.1 million people are beneficiaries of various schemes.
* 60 per cent of the governments R 1.15 trillion budget is aimed at social spending for the poor.
n In 2011,the unemployment rate in SA was 25 per cent. The Expanded Public Works Programmethe governments largest job creation programmelasts for 46 days and pays only $9 a day.
THE NORDIC MODEL
The Nordic states are still the worlds most generous welfare states. But a series of crises has sent these nations back to the account books to balance their budgets and welfare is not as forthcoming as it was before.
SWEDEN: NOT FOR EVERYONE
* The government has opened up services to competition (private players) to improve the quality of Swedens universal health and education systems.
* 27 per cent of health care is delivered by profit-making private firms.
* In education,private firms can run free schools. 400 such schools are in operation,
* Universities and adult education are free. The state offers six years of grant and an optional loan.
* 242,000: number of children living in poverty in 2010.
* Homelessness has quadrupled from 8,300 people to 34,000 out of Swedens 9 million population.
* At 27 per cent in the first quarter of 2013,Swedens unemployment rate is the highest in the EU.
DENMARK: RETHINKING WELFARE
* Denmarks social safety net includes free health care,free university education and hefty payouts even to the rich.
* 18 per cent of Denmarks population is over 65. And only 47 per cent work.
* Only 3 of 98 municipalities will have a majority of residents working in 2013.
* In 2000-12,average hours of work fell by 8 per cent.
* 250,000 Danes have no economic incentive to give up unemployment benefits and take up a job.
UNITED KINGDOM: AUSTERITY,NOT WELFARE
On April 1 this year,the largest ever welfare cuts came into force in Britain.
* 1 per cent per year: The rise in most welfare benefits for the next three years.
* 9,000,000: Number of families set to lose an average of $256 a year.
* $543 million: Reduction in the budget for legal aid. One of the motives for this is to prevent legal challenges to the governments draconian welfare cuts.
* Health and Social Care Act: This new Act overturns the 1946 legislation that held the NHS as a provider of free,universal health care. The government no longer has a legal duty to provide comprehensive health service.
* 1 million: Number of children reduced to poverty in the next five years,thanks to the welfare cuts. This adds to the four millionone in threealready poor children.