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Idleness is the tool of the devil Unemployment turns the young into targets

A bonfire on the Loyalist Ballycraigy estate in Antrim (Matt Cardy/Getty Images)

A bonfire on the Loyalist Ballycraigy estate in Antrim (Matt Cardy/Getty Images)


November 30, 2022   5 mins

Idleness is the strangest of Beveridge’s five Giants, an amorphous shapeshifter in comparison with the terrible lumbering colossus Want. It appears last in Beveridge’s sequence, a place usually reserved for the most baleful of adversaries — Death upon its pale horse, for instance, among the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.

While little is achieved without hard work and personal responsibility, the narrative around idleness has been cursed since the Eighties, largely because the conditions of the post-war consensus (partly established by Beveridge) have been dismantled from above. The poor are expected to honour their side of a social contract that no longer exists and was destroyed without their consultation for the great profit of others.

The Tory rhetoric of “get on your bike” did not just fail to motivate but seemed designed to demoralise, as any gaslighting would. Here was a form of magical thinking that we might now call “manifestation”, but this was a particularly unholy form of magic, given it was being proposed by many of those who had presided over the de-industrialisation of the areas and populations they were now hectoring for their “idleness”.

This attitude persisted longer than might be expected, with the tabloids providing salacious moral panics around single mothers and benefits cheats. These were designed to enrage anyone striving to work through increasingly precarious conditions. The problem was that, unlike money, moral lessons do trickle down. In place of the now-dishonoured social contract came a society run by and for rentiers and lenders, a place where tax evasion and asset-stripping were not as rare as they may or should have been.

What incentive is left for those struggling to patch together a living wage from what had once been side-hustles, who have little job security in the age of zero-hour contracts, where the differentiation between work and life has been obliterated, where effective unions and collective bargaining are for most industries ancient history, where savings will be eaten away by inflation, where there is a chasm between wages and affording a home, where an accident or sickness might spell financial ruin, and having a child is an unaffordable luxury? What moral instruction about idleness and hard work are they expected to believe in?

Again, Beveridge is instructive here. For all his paternalism, he was right in identifying that one of the primary ills of his time was not just unemployment but casual employment, which trapped many people in an inescapable cycle of poverty. Worryingly, this trend of “flexibility” appears to have returned, and even when there is relatively secure employment, the results can be disastrous, calling to mind Mr Micawber’s sterling advice in Dickens’s David Copperfield: “Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen nineteen and six, result happiness. Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pounds ought and six, result misery.”

According to the Department for Work and Pensions, there were 3.9 million children living in poverty in the UK in 2020-21. The same study states that “75% of children growing up in poverty live in a household where at least one person works”. This was the environment I grew up in, watching my parents work hard and with great dignity only to be punished at each turn. This was echoed in the pride and resilience of our town in Northern Ireland, which was not so much left behind as scuttled. One of the major factors was institutionalised sectarianism, against Catholics, in almost every aspect of that society as well as the murderous bloodshed of the Troubles that had erupted. Having to listen to lectures, full of callous piety, about the idle poor from the idle rich added insult to injury. Across the UK, the situation remains, with condescending talk of “populism” from elites, who switch around their seating arrangements periodically.

Many politicians and commentators have the luxury of ignoring how most people live, never mind those who live below the poverty line. There are, however, groups of people paying to the poor, which brings us to the reason why the Giant of Idleness is so destructive. When the best prospects for young people in a city or town are stagnation through unemployment or badly paid jobs with no prospects of career or life advancement, the mind turns to other routes of betterment. Fringe groups such as gangs and drug-dealers fill the vacuum, offering a way out and a way up, as corrosive as they are. When society fails to utilise talent and drive, more nefarious entrepreneurial agents will take advantage.

In the town where I grew up, paramilitaries served this role. Initially, recruitment was organic. There was a low-level though bloody civil war, which affected every aspect of life, and harassment, discrimination and the massacre of civilians sent many into the arms of Republicans and Loyalists. Now in deprived areas of Northern Ireland, even maintaining the pretence of a cause has largely fallen away for these groups, who to varying degrees have embraced gangsterism. I was watching the Northern Irish news one evening with a friend when a well-known paramilitary and “community spokesman” appeared and gave a talk on “the plague” of drugs in Loyalist neighbourhoods. My friend burst out laughing and informed me that the gentleman was their first point of contact when procuring substances.

The Troubles may have abated, or rather been placed in a medically induced coma, but power-sharing is paralysed, the communities are still largely segregated, and the fundamental economic and social issues go unacknowledged and unsolved. Poverty is endemic in many areas of Northern Ireland. In a sense, the conflict and division continue in an even more degenerated form. First as tragedy, then as farce.

In the Nineties, I saw this process first-hand. Many of my childhood friends were bright, sometimes brilliant, young men who had few legitimate paths open to them. The paths they chose, while they were underage admittedly, were an abomination. One of them killed a man, a father of four, outside a Chinese restaurant one night. Another was exiled from the city for drug-dealing. I lost count of how many ended up damaged by seeking escape through drink and drugs. With all of Beveridge’s Giants, there’s a haunting sense of contingency. My suspicion as to why Idleness is placed last is that it’s the one ill where, at its worst, one conspires in the ruin of oneself and those around them.

Northern Ireland is a place that has been continually othered for decades by the rest of the UK and the Republic of Ireland. While it is a unique province in many ways, it is not quite as distant as people would like to believe. I see similar dynamics at work in London gangs and with Islamist extremists in terms of how and who they recruit or groom. In county lines cases, I’ve witnessed a familiar pattern, not just in the incentivising of drug-dealing and evasion of the police, but in the use of drugs as a temporary “escape” from places where there is little to do.

We were those kids and the devil made plenty of work for us. If we’d been approached then with sanctimonious lectures, or panaceas like a community centre, or “just talk to your friends about your feelings” platitudes, we’d have replied with laughter and scorn because even as children, we knew that, for things to change, there had to be a fundamental reassessment of the way the entire society had been stacked and who was benefiting. In our inarticulate way, we knew that it wasn’t a question of work or idleness but the right work and the right idleness, and that, ultimately, though we didn’t then know its name, it was decadence that we had to avoid, by which I mean, doing that which is harmful even catastrophic to oneself, either as an individual or a society. And this is why Idleness will be the last, and not the first, Giant to go. Only when we have begun to confront all the other Giants will this final one begin to collapse.


Darran Anderson is the author of Imaginary Cities and Inventory.


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Lindsay S
Lindsay S
1 year ago

Tbf if I was to sit at home all day with daytime telly on and perusing social media. I’d probably be driven to drugs and despair.
Half the problem is that many of the jobs that require minimal qualifications or experience are mind numbing and depressing and the more vocational jobs that come with a degree of satisfaction are very low paid. We have many young people today who are not academic and yet being forced to remain in education till 18 with very little available for them in terms of apprenticeship till they’re over 18. They become disillusioned with education and work.

Lindsay S
Lindsay S
1 year ago

Tbf if I was to sit at home all day with daytime telly on and perusing social media. I’d probably be driven to drugs and despair.
Half the problem is that many of the jobs that require minimal qualifications or experience are mind numbing and depressing and the more vocational jobs that come with a degree of satisfaction are very low paid. We have many young people today who are not academic and yet being forced to remain in education till 18 with very little available for them in terms of apprenticeship till they’re over 18. They become disillusioned with education and work.

James Kirk
James Kirk
1 year ago

They threw the baby out with the bathwater. The Scouts, the Cadet Corps, National Service. What happened to the biker vicar who ran the Youth Club? Now a simpering liberal leftie wokist or a harrassed bloke juggling a budget for his three churches while Bishops dress up in robes and pontificate about LGB.
Who do the poor kids look up to? Go to for help? The well dressed bloke in the shiny car, a pocket full of fifties and little bags of pills for his Mum or to sell on for some pocket money.

James Kirk
James Kirk
1 year ago

They threw the baby out with the bathwater. The Scouts, the Cadet Corps, National Service. What happened to the biker vicar who ran the Youth Club? Now a simpering liberal leftie wokist or a harrassed bloke juggling a budget for his three churches while Bishops dress up in robes and pontificate about LGB.
Who do the poor kids look up to? Go to for help? The well dressed bloke in the shiny car, a pocket full of fifties and little bags of pills for his Mum or to sell on for some pocket money.

Jeremy Bray
Jeremy Bray
1 year ago

All men’s miseries derive from not being able to sit in a quiet room alone.

Blaise Pascal

Michael Murray
Michael Murray
1 year ago
Reply to  Jeremy Bray

Are you sûre…..all of them…

Michael Murray
Michael Murray
1 year ago
Reply to  Jeremy Bray

Are you sûre…..all of them…

Jeremy Bray
Jeremy Bray
1 year ago

All men’s miseries derive from not being able to sit in a quiet room alone.

Blaise Pascal

Chris W
Chris W
1 year ago

The commentator compares his life struggling in poverty with the way things are today. Those of us who can remember life in the 50s will realise that the definition of poverty has changed.

I grew up on an estate where people didn’t have cars or telephones. Our household was relatively rich because both of my parents worked. That meant that even in primary school I had a key to get into the house after school.

Today’s definition of poverty is completely different; it simply means that families have everything they need but they don’t have choices. If they buy the latest pair of trainers they have to cut back on food. Hardly poverty!!

Lorna Dobson
Lorna Dobson
1 year ago
Reply to  Chris W

There is a running “protest” in my state, where the homeless are living in tents on the state house lawn. BTW, the tents look new and the “homeless” are well-dressed, taking photos and creating videos showing their distress on their iPhones.

Linda Hutchinson
Linda Hutchinson
1 year ago
Reply to  Chris W

Your life sounds so familiar to me (except that my mother only worked part-time), I remember the key around the neck and the jam sarnies laid out for when we got home. I think one of the main differences is that there just wasn’t as much to buy; all these consumer electronics and other items that I see in shop windows, a lot of the time I don’t even know what they do, and if I do know I just wonder why anyone would want one. Another major difference is that food was relatively more expensive in the 50s and 60s, but housing costs were lower and there was much more in the way of social (council) housing. Although unemployment benefit has remained largely the same when controlled for RPI it has fallen significantly in proportion to wages since 1970, but it started to pickup again in 2010, but it’s still something like 12% compared with c22% in 1970, which means that an unemployed person would “feel” worse off.

Lorna Dobson
Lorna Dobson
1 year ago
Reply to  Chris W

There is a running “protest” in my state, where the homeless are living in tents on the state house lawn. BTW, the tents look new and the “homeless” are well-dressed, taking photos and creating videos showing their distress on their iPhones.

Linda Hutchinson
Linda Hutchinson
1 year ago
Reply to  Chris W

Your life sounds so familiar to me (except that my mother only worked part-time), I remember the key around the neck and the jam sarnies laid out for when we got home. I think one of the main differences is that there just wasn’t as much to buy; all these consumer electronics and other items that I see in shop windows, a lot of the time I don’t even know what they do, and if I do know I just wonder why anyone would want one. Another major difference is that food was relatively more expensive in the 50s and 60s, but housing costs were lower and there was much more in the way of social (council) housing. Although unemployment benefit has remained largely the same when controlled for RPI it has fallen significantly in proportion to wages since 1970, but it started to pickup again in 2010, but it’s still something like 12% compared with c22% in 1970, which means that an unemployed person would “feel” worse off.

Chris W
Chris W
1 year ago

The commentator compares his life struggling in poverty with the way things are today. Those of us who can remember life in the 50s will realise that the definition of poverty has changed.

I grew up on an estate where people didn’t have cars or telephones. Our household was relatively rich because both of my parents worked. That meant that even in primary school I had a key to get into the house after school.

Today’s definition of poverty is completely different; it simply means that families have everything they need but they don’t have choices. If they buy the latest pair of trainers they have to cut back on food. Hardly poverty!!

CHARLES STANHOPE
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago

IDLENESS!
Now as you might expect the Ancient Romans had the answer to that, lavish public entertainment or ‘Games’.

First, the Circus, an enormous venue devoted to Chariot Racing, a combination of Formula I & Death in the Afternoon. The Circus Maximus in Rome is thought to have accommodated upwards of 250,000 bodies! Even the remote Province of Britannia had at least one (somewhat smaller) Circus in Colchester!

Next the Amphitheater for ‘full on’ blood sports, occasionally …‘sine missione’- without mercy! The Flavian Amphitheater otherwise known as the Colosseum seated upwards of 50,000 bodies, that at Nimes about 20,000, whilst those in Britannia about 7,000.

Then for more intellectual pursuits the Theatre, seating normally about 5-10,000. Open air, day long plays and pantomime, from where incidentally we derive the word fornication!

Alternatively for musical recitals, poetry reading or lectures there was the Odeon, a roofed building, similar to the Theatre but considerably smaller, seating about 500-1,000.

Finally after such an exhausting day a visit to the Thermae- Baths was axiomatic. Larger than most medieval Cathedrals, these were vast hydro engineering masterpieces, lavishly equipped with nearly every luxury one could desire, Gymnasiums, Libraries, Brothels,Bars and so forth.

All this from a pre-Industrial society, virtually free, open to all, women and slaves included! What more could one ask for?
As PBS*would have said “Look on my works ye mighty and despair “.

(*Percy Bysshe Shelley.)

Last edited 1 year ago by CHARLES STANHOPE
Chris W
Chris W
1 year ago

Thanks for your penultimate paragraph.

Idleness is not a political problem, it is an attitude of mind. An article blaming social problems on idleness is a nonsense. The cause and effect should be reversed.

Gordon Black
Gordon Black
1 year ago
Reply to  Chris W

Exactly. Idleness causes indigence … diligence causes adequacy. Both causes are attitudes of mind.

Tony Conrad
Tony Conrad
1 year ago
Reply to  Chris W

Maybe in some circumstances but idleness is a big problem if you want to get on. No boss wants an idle worker and I think the proverb “the devil makes use of idle hands” has a truth in it.

Gordon Black
Gordon Black
1 year ago
Reply to  Chris W

Exactly. Idleness causes indigence … diligence causes adequacy. Both causes are attitudes of mind.

Tony Conrad
Tony Conrad
1 year ago
Reply to  Chris W

Maybe in some circumstances but idleness is a big problem if you want to get on. No boss wants an idle worker and I think the proverb “the devil makes use of idle hands” has a truth in it.

Linda Hutchinson
Linda Hutchinson
1 year ago

Just one minor quibble – the term “games” (or, more accurately, “munerae” with its religious connotation which is very boring unless you are facinated by the Romans, as I am) was reserved for the amphitheatre goings-on. Additionally, the thermae were cheap, so everyone could afford it, and women had their own private sessions (no trans Romans allowed here).

CHARLES STANHOPE
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago

You are perfectly correct, but ever conscious of the Censor, I thought it might be better to condense the facts, and keep it simple.
Like you I am also fascinated by this subject!

CHARLES STANHOPE
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago

You are perfectly correct, but ever conscious of the Censor, I thought it might be better to condense the facts, and keep it simple.
Like you I am also fascinated by this subject!

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
1 year ago

Far cry from Colchester nowadays, full of tatooed beardies in hoodies and trackies, whose only useful function is as late night punchbags for pissed Paras ….

CHARLES STANHOPE
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago

Ah but Aldershot is delighted the Paras have moved on.

CHARLES STANHOPE
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago

Ah but Aldershot is delighted the Paras have moved on.

Chris W
Chris W
1 year ago

Thanks for your penultimate paragraph.

Idleness is not a political problem, it is an attitude of mind. An article blaming social problems on idleness is a nonsense. The cause and effect should be reversed.

Linda Hutchinson
Linda Hutchinson
1 year ago

Just one minor quibble – the term “games” (or, more accurately, “munerae” with its religious connotation which is very boring unless you are facinated by the Romans, as I am) was reserved for the amphitheatre goings-on. Additionally, the thermae were cheap, so everyone could afford it, and women had their own private sessions (no trans Romans allowed here).

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
1 year ago

Far cry from Colchester nowadays, full of tatooed beardies in hoodies and trackies, whose only useful function is as late night punchbags for pissed Paras ….

CHARLES STANHOPE
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago

IDLENESS!
Now as you might expect the Ancient Romans had the answer to that, lavish public entertainment or ‘Games’.

First, the Circus, an enormous venue devoted to Chariot Racing, a combination of Formula I & Death in the Afternoon. The Circus Maximus in Rome is thought to have accommodated upwards of 250,000 bodies! Even the remote Province of Britannia had at least one (somewhat smaller) Circus in Colchester!

Next the Amphitheater for ‘full on’ blood sports, occasionally …‘sine missione’- without mercy! The Flavian Amphitheater otherwise known as the Colosseum seated upwards of 50,000 bodies, that at Nimes about 20,000, whilst those in Britannia about 7,000.

Then for more intellectual pursuits the Theatre, seating normally about 5-10,000. Open air, day long plays and pantomime, from where incidentally we derive the word fornication!

Alternatively for musical recitals, poetry reading or lectures there was the Odeon, a roofed building, similar to the Theatre but considerably smaller, seating about 500-1,000.

Finally after such an exhausting day a visit to the Thermae- Baths was axiomatic. Larger than most medieval Cathedrals, these were vast hydro engineering masterpieces, lavishly equipped with nearly every luxury one could desire, Gymnasiums, Libraries, Brothels,Bars and so forth.

All this from a pre-Industrial society, virtually free, open to all, women and slaves included! What more could one ask for?
As PBS*would have said “Look on my works ye mighty and despair “.

(*Percy Bysshe Shelley.)

Last edited 1 year ago by CHARLES STANHOPE
Charlie Rose
Charlie Rose
1 year ago

“…because even as children, we knew that, for things to change, there had to be a fundamental reassessment of the way the entire society had been stacked and who was benefiting.”
The main purpose of entrenched power, whether in Government, Corporations, academia, or even science, engineering and the arts, is to retain power. Those benefitting are those loyal to, or loved by, the elite in the power structure – the friends and family of the leaders. The same is true when a community is run by drug dealers and gangsters.
You don’t want to get on the wrong side of the law, because they can make your life a living hell, take away all your freedom, and in many countries, even legally put you to death. But you don’t want to get on the wrong side of the local bosses either. The problem for the masses in most places around the world is walking the fine line between a local gangster society and the legal government society, where both are corrupt.

Charlie Rose
Charlie Rose
1 year ago

“…because even as children, we knew that, for things to change, there had to be a fundamental reassessment of the way the entire society had been stacked and who was benefiting.”
The main purpose of entrenched power, whether in Government, Corporations, academia, or even science, engineering and the arts, is to retain power. Those benefitting are those loyal to, or loved by, the elite in the power structure – the friends and family of the leaders. The same is true when a community is run by drug dealers and gangsters.
You don’t want to get on the wrong side of the law, because they can make your life a living hell, take away all your freedom, and in many countries, even legally put you to death. But you don’t want to get on the wrong side of the local bosses either. The problem for the masses in most places around the world is walking the fine line between a local gangster society and the legal government society, where both are corrupt.

Martin Bollis
Martin Bollis
1 year ago

And yet, Darran, you are now writing articles for Unherd. What, really, was the difference between you and your mates? Personal choices, parents? Presumably, since we’ve controlled for background, not all the “others” you’ve blamed.

Martin Bollis
Martin Bollis
1 year ago

And yet, Darran, you are now writing articles for Unherd. What, really, was the difference between you and your mates? Personal choices, parents? Presumably, since we’ve controlled for background, not all the “others” you’ve blamed.

Tony Conrad
Tony Conrad
1 year ago

Many are struggling but some have been given a house and plenty of benefits. Therefore some who would have been homeless and in poverty are helped. Around my way there are thousands and thousands of council houses may of them filled by immigrants who have just arrived here. Even the boat people are in posh hotels and stately homes with a visit from a doctor twice a week. Now they are working out what employment they will do. Everyone that was on the steet where I live have been housed. And yet I know that the problem is real in other places. I don’t know what is wrong with the employment situation but I suspect it is to do with global remainer type of companies which are supported instead of small companies where you can learn much more and gain a skill to start on the ladder. So basically it is a political problem created by governments and particularly this government which is betraying ordinary people and seems to have lost it’s way.

Tony Conrad
Tony Conrad
1 year ago

Many are struggling but some have been given a house and plenty of benefits. Therefore some who would have been homeless and in poverty are helped. Around my way there are thousands and thousands of council houses may of them filled by immigrants who have just arrived here. Even the boat people are in posh hotels and stately homes with a visit from a doctor twice a week. Now they are working out what employment they will do. Everyone that was on the steet where I live have been housed. And yet I know that the problem is real in other places. I don’t know what is wrong with the employment situation but I suspect it is to do with global remainer type of companies which are supported instead of small companies where you can learn much more and gain a skill to start on the ladder. So basically it is a political problem created by governments and particularly this government which is betraying ordinary people and seems to have lost it’s way.