Obama tells PM to shelve proposed magazine levy
The Dominican first lady and the missing millions
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‘Cigar-gate’: Did the US overstep its bounds?
3
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2 - 8 March 2012 | Vol 15 Issue 09
Denmark’s only English-language newspaper | cphpost.dk PETER STANNERS
NEWS
School’s request to teach Turkish as a second language sets off a debate on culture versus commerce
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OPINION
Defending the Danes Columnist Justin Cremer worries that he will be infected with ‘bitter foreigner syndrome’
9 SPORT
10,000 strong: ‘Don’t ACTA fool’4
Lace up those jogging shoes; it’s time to end your winter hibernation and get back into running shape
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Resistance builds against online rights agreement
BUSINESS
Welfare reforms target young benefit recipients
Showdown looming
JENNIFER BULEY
If Ryanair refuses to negotiate, trade union 3F says the airline’s planes will be denied fuel and services
Proposed changes shift focus from lifelong benefits to rehabilitation
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VAST WELFARE reform spearheaded by the political left is gaining broad support from a wide spectrum of society, including social workers, economists, mayors and leaders of the political far-right. Socialdemokraterne (S) are behind the proposed reforms that aim to reduce the number of people under 40 on permanent welfare benefits and revolutionise the way the state assists people with mental and physical illnesses. “We’re working to make it so that
nobody under 40 will be given permanent disability status. Of course, there are exceptions,” the prime minister, Helle Thorning-Schmidt (S), said in her weekly press conference on Tuesday. Some 245,000 people – approximately 9 percent of the potential work force – have permanent disability status (førtidspension), which means they have a full state pension for life. Of those, one in seven – or 33,500 – are younger than 40. In a written plan laid out by the social minister, Karen Hækkerup (S), and the employment minister, Mette Frederiksen (S), on Tuesday, the government proposed to end lifelong disability benefits for people under 40, unless they are so physically or mentally compromised that it is “absolutely obvious that they
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will never be able to work”. Instead, benefit recipients under 40 will have their cases assigned to multidisciplinary “rehabilitation teams”, which will create individualised rehabilitation plans, which may include, among other things, psychological counselling, social skill training, education, job training, a mentorship and – initially – a state-subsidised job. Rehabilitation periods will last up to five years and will be renewable. During the five-year periods, individuals will be allowed to both collect welfare benefits and work, if they can, in order to incentivise working. A second part of the reform aims to re-engineer the part-time disability job programme (fleksjobordningen), under
which an additional 53,000 Danes currently receive full-time salaries for parttime work, because they are considered too sick to work full-time, but not sick enough for permanent disability. The state currently subsidises a set percentage of their full-time salaries, but there is no ceiling on how much the state will pay. As a consequence, critics note, the programme rewards high earners and their employers, while taxpayers have to pay half the salary of some individuals who end up earning as much as 60,000 kroner per month for working 15 hours per week. The reform calls for a five-year, renewable limit on a person’s part-time
Reform continues on page 5
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