Paragraphs
4
Introduction - Background
Introduction - Factors & LOA
Want:
KU1
Firstly, the National Insurance Act 1946 provided financial protection in the event of unemployment, sickness and retirement. Under this act workers received 26 shillings a week – or 42 shillings for married men – and the elderly received pensions.
Want:
Analysis 1
This act can be said to have met the needs of the people it applied to all adults, meaning that established standardised minimal living conditions could be experienced and benefited from by all employed adults.
Want:
Analysis+ 1
Want:
KU2
Secondly, the National Assistance Act 1948 set up national assistance boards to help citizens with insufficient resources to meet their needs.
Want:
Analysis 2
This act can be said to have met the needs of the people because it provided financial assistance to the unemployed who would otherwise struggle to get by.
Want:
Analysis+ 2
Want:
Evaluation
Overall, it can be said that the labour reforms attempted to address the giant of want because more was done to ensure aid for those out of work who couldn’t afford necessities.
Want:
Evaluation+
Squalor:
KU1
Firstly, the New Towns Act 1946 planned for twelve new towns to reduce overcrowding. Stevenage in Hertfordshire was the first new town created under the act.
Squalor:
Analysis 1
Squalor:
Analysis+ 1
Squalor:
KU2
Secondly, the Housing Act 1949 allowed councils to buy houses in disrepair to make improvements, and householders could apply for assistance to also make improvements.
Squalor:
Analysis 2
This act can be said to have met the needs of the people because allowing for houses to be improved and providing resource to facilitate this would surely increase the quantity of adequate housing available for British households desperately in need of this.
Squalor:
Analysis+ 2
However, it can be said that this act did not fully meet the needs of the people because poor housing was still a serious problem at the end of the Labour administration in 1951, which suggests that although the Government was allowing for housing improvements to be made there wasn’t enough done to oversee that this would happen or encourage it.
Squalor:
Evaluation
Overall, it can be said that the labour reforms attempted to address the giant of squalor because the new towns being built would relieve overcrowded towns of this pressure, which would be in dire conditions because of this.
Squalor:
Evaluation+
Disease:
KU
2
Disease:
Analysis
This act can be said to have met the needs of the people because those in desperate need could finally seek adequate treatment they previously could not afford from health professionals in a sterile environment.
Disease:
Analysis+
However, it can be said that this act did not fully meet the needs of the people because development of this system was hampered by the country’s dated hospitals, meaning that more technical or advanced treatments weren’t locally available for many people.
Disease:
Evaluation
Overall, it can be said that the Labour reforms attempted to address the giant of disease because this was the first time for many Brits that they would have the ability to seek proper healthcare without worrying about lack of insurance or expenses.
Disease:
Evaluation+