True enough, but perhaps not sufficiently so to prevent social welfare being useful politically. Social welfare here is far from universal; there are interviews, tests, social worker's discretion, and, for many categories, a race requirement. (Germany may be different.) It makes perfect sense when you view social welfare as a patrimonial system for vote-buying at the lowest cost. (Just as industry policy here is mostly grant-laundering at high cost). Elites can still use social welfare to buy new immigrant voters as long as existing citizens can be excluded from it. There is a level of economic disarray at which this will cease to draw, but the regime's other vital functions have probably imploded before that. I encourage both tax avoidance and tax evasion to accelerate this, I admit.