'Culture of despair'
An estimated 500,000 people are now claiming IB, while claims from under-25s have risen by more than half over the last 10 years.
INCAPACITY FIGURES
2.64m people claim IB
It costs the country £12.65bn every year
More than half of IB claimants have been on benefit for 5 years or more
The number of young people claiming IB is up by a half
Mr Cameron said: "I don't believe that there are nearly half a million young people in Britain with a disability which prevents them from doing any work at all.
"What we have is a culture of despair, where kids grow up without any idea that for our society to function everyone has to pull their weight if they can."
Speaking on the BBC's Andrew Marr Show, Prime Minister Gordon Brown said: government's own proposals were "far more revolutionary" than those put forward by the Conservatives.
He said: "Today the issue is people don't have the skills, even when there are 600,000 vacancies in the economy."
Mr Brown also said: "The next stage is not what the Conservatives are talking about but giving people the skills to get into work."
Work and Pensions Secretary Peter Hain said of the Tory proposals: "They are plagiarising plans already announced by us before Christmas and seeking to present them as their own.
"The Tories have no credible plan to fund an expansion in 'welfare to work'.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/7173453.stm
An estimated 500,000 people are now claiming IB, while claims from under-25s have risen by more than half over the last 10 years.
INCAPACITY FIGURES
2.64m people claim IB
It costs the country £12.65bn every year
More than half of IB claimants have been on benefit for 5 years or more
The number of young people claiming IB is up by a half
Mr Cameron said: "I don't believe that there are nearly half a million young people in Britain with a disability which prevents them from doing any work at all.
"What we have is a culture of despair, where kids grow up without any idea that for our society to function everyone has to pull their weight if they can."
Speaking on the BBC's Andrew Marr Show, Prime Minister Gordon Brown said: government's own proposals were "far more revolutionary" than those put forward by the Conservatives.
He said: "Today the issue is people don't have the skills, even when there are 600,000 vacancies in the economy."
Mr Brown also said: "The next stage is not what the Conservatives are talking about but giving people the skills to get into work."
Work and Pensions Secretary Peter Hain said of the Tory proposals: "They are plagiarising plans already announced by us before Christmas and seeking to present them as their own.
"The Tories have no credible plan to fund an expansion in 'welfare to work'.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/7173453.stm