It’s not just Newstart.
Single parents are $271 per fortnight worse off. Labor needs an overarching
welfare review -
The Conversation -
December 3, 2018
Single parents have been made worse off by the Howard, Rudd, Gillard, Abbott and
Turnbull governments. It’s time to take stock.
Professor, Crawford
School of Public Policy, Australian National University
Ben
Phillips
Associate Professor,
Centre for Social Research and Methods, Director, Centre for Economic Policy
Research (CEPR), Australian National University
Bruce
Bradbury
Associate Professor,
Social Policy Research Centre, UNSW
David
Stanton
Honorary Associate
Professor, Crawford School of Public Policy, ANU, Australian National University
Matthew
Gray
Director, ANU Centre
for Social Research and Methods, Australian National University
Miranda
Stewart
Professor, Crawford
School of Public Policy, Australian National University
Disclosure statement
Peter Whiteford has
received funding from the Australian Research Council and from the Department of
Social Services. He is affiliated with the Centre for Policy Development and is
an ACOSS Policy Adviser, and was a member of the Reference Group for the Harmer
Pension Review.
Ben Phillips
receives funding from the Australian Research Council.
Bruce Bradbury is
employed by the University of New South Wales and receives project funding from
the Australian Research Council and the Australian Council of Social Services.
Matthew Gray has
received funding from many Australian Government departments and Australian
state and territory departments to undertake research.
Miranda Stewart
receives funding from the Australian Research Council.
David Stanton does
not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or
organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant
affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Two crossbenchers,
Cathy McGowan and Rebekha Sharkie, want to go further.
They have
introduced a
private member’s bill that would create an independent commission to examine
the adequacy of all social security payments other than family payments and
payments to veterans.
The Government
opposes it. Labor has opposed such proposals in the past. Prime Minister Scott
Morrison has said he would like to increase payments, but they would be ones of
his choosing – he would
lift the pension before lifting Newstart.
But the pension is
already much higher than Newstart, and other benefits have fallen behind by
more.
What’s wrong with Newstart?
Newstart is
inadequate and getting worse.
The Organisation
for Economic Cooperation and Development raised “concerns
about its adequacy” as long ago as 2010.
In a report on
Australia it suggested that not only it might be insufficient to live on, it
also might be insufficient to enable those on it
to look for work.
The relatively low
net replacement rate in the first year of the unemployment spell raises issues
about its effectiveness in providing sufficient support for those experiencing a
job loss, or enabling someone to look for a suitable job.
The main reason why
it is inadequate is that it hasn’t increased by much more than inflation since
1994. General living standards have soared during those two and a half decades,
as has the pension which is linked to them by being set as proportion of male
wages, and which was increased substantially in 2009.
ACOSS
Newstart is now
only A$275.20 per week. The pension is A$417.20 per week (A$458.15 with the
pension supplement and energy supplement).
Unless it is better
indexed, Newstart will slide even further relative to other payments and living
standards.
Since 1994-95 the
buying power of the median household disposable income has
climbed 55%. The buying power of Newstart has barely budged.
It has pushed
people on Newstart further down the income ladder.
In 1994-95 a single
person on Newstart received A$24 per week less than a low-earning household at
the top of the bottom tenth of the income distribution.
The relative
decline in Newstart was the result of neglect. It was left indexed to the
consumer price index when, over the long term, it should have been indexed to a
measure that moves with community living standards.
But in other cases,
governments under five prime ministers over the past twelve years have made
explicit decisions to cut assistance, most severely for low income single
parents.
In 2006 the Howard
government made substantial changes to the Parenting Payment Single (PPS) and
the Parenting Payment – Partnered (PPP) as part of what it called a
welfare to work program.
Single parents
claiming the PPS after July 1, 2006 would lose it when their youngest child
turned eight. They would go onto the much lower Newstart unemployment benefit,
and be expected to look for work.
Partnered parents
claiming the PPP would lose it when their youngest child turned six, but for
them it made little difference because their parenting payment and Newstart were
about the same.
But in 2013, the
Gillard government
removed grandfathering, requiring all single parents with older children to
be moved onto Newstart or other payments if eligible.
At that time the
maximum rate of Parenting Payment Single was $331.85 per week. The maximum rate
of Newstart was $266.50.
And a change
introduced by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd made the parenting payments themselves
less generous.
For many decades,
the basic rate of payment for most single parents was the same as the pension.
In 2009 the Rudd
government delinked them and
lowered the wages benchmark so that PPS was set at 25% of male total average
weekly earnings instead of 27.7%.
The
2009-10 Budget also changed the link between levels of the maximum rate of
Family Tax Benefit Part A and the married rate of pension, a link originally
established following the
Hawke government’s child poverty pledge.
These changes have shrunk Family Tax Benefit payments per child from 16.6% –
21.6% of the married pension rate to 14.5% – 18.9%, a difference now of $13 per
week for each younger child and $17 per week for each older child – with more
shrinkage to come.
In 2014 the first
Abbott budget attempted to further wind back
Family Tax Benefits.
After a tough time
in the Senate, several of his measures finally passed, under Prime Minister
Malcolm Turnbull in 2016 and 2017.
Family Tax Benefit
B has been closed to couple families with children aged 13 years or older and
the Family Tax Benefit B income test tightened, the size of the payments to
large families has been wound back, the Family Tax benefit A end of year
supplement has been withdrawn from families earning over A$80,000 per annum and
rates have pay have been temporarily frozen, so that they don’t even increase
with inflation.
What’s been the
total of cuts since 2006?
The cumulative
effects of the policy choices since 2006 on the disposable incomes of single
parent families are substantial.
We have compared
how much low-income parents currently receive, compared to what they would be
receiving if these changes had not been made.
Our calculations
are conservative.
We have ignored a
number of changes including payments that have come and gone such as the
Schoolkid’s Bonus and the Energy Supplement or changes that affect high income
families. Nor have we taken into account the loss of payments to families with
with four or more children due to the
phasing out of the Large Family Supplement from July 2016.
Single parents still on Parenting Payment Single with two younger children have
lost nearly $85 per fortnight; about 6% of their disposable incomes. For
families with older children, the loss is about $271 per fortnight; a cut in
disposable income of nearly 19%.
In total there are around 360,000 families with children, Australia’s poorest,
who are getting considerably less financial support.
It has happened as a result of actions by both sides of politics under prime
ministers Howard, Rudd, Gillard, Abbott and Turnbull.
As with the decision to link Newstart to the consumer price index rather than
wages, the effects of their decisions will widen over time. The poorest
families, and their children, will increasingly fall behind the rest of the
population.
Research by
Peter Saunders, Bruce Bradbury and Melissa Wong for the joint ACOSS-UNSW
report on poverty finds that the transfer of 80,000 sole parents to Newstart in
2013 was associated with an increase in the rate of after-housing poverty among
unemployed sole parents
from 35% to nearly 60%.
Have the cuts got
single parents into jobs?
The stated purpose
of the cuts to Parenting Payment Single was to get them into jobs.
First impressions
suggest that they have.
In 2005-06
51% of single parent households had social security benefits as their main
source of income. A decade later this
was 42%.
In 2005 around 49%
of lone parent families with a youngest child under 15 were employed. By 2009
the proportion had grown to 59%.
But in both cases
the changes started before the changes to benefits, from the middle of the
1990s.
And the proportion
of single parents employed went backwards during the global financial crisis,
sliding to 53% and only recovering to 55% in 2017, despite the move of families
from Parenting Payment Single to Newstart.
It’s time for a
proper review
The “root and
branch review” promised by Bill Shorten and the ongoing commission proposed by
crossbenchers are not mutually exclusive.
An immediate review
could be used to increase payments in the shorter term, while an ongoing
commission could examine longer-term priorities.
The scope of these
inquiries should not be limited to Newstart.
Parenting Payments
and Family Tax Benefits are also a fundamental component of the social safety
net.
There is case for
going further and examining the entire structure of the social security system.
The most
comprehensive examination was the
Henderson Poverty Inquiry commissioned by the McMahon government and
extended by the Whitlam government more than four decades ago.
A comprehensive
review of Australia’s social security system, undertaken in an integrated
fashion and including tax as well as payments (including those for childcare and
to support people who study and work) is overdue.
We need such a
review to consider the design of our safety net in the light of economic,
demographic, technological and social changes, and those to come.
It ought to be a
key priority of Australia’s next government.
It ought to set up
our support systems for the future.