Introductory Info
Date introduced: 25 February 2021
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Social Services
Commencement: 1 April 2021
The Bills Digest at a glance
The purpose of the Social Services Legislation Amendment
(Strengthening Income Support) Bill 2021 (the Bill) is to amend the Social Security Act
1991 (the SS Act) to:
- increase
the maximum basic rates of JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance, Youth Disability
Support Pension, Parenting Payment and Austudy by $50 per fortnight from 1
April 2021
- increase
the ordinary income free area for JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance (Other),
Parenting Payment Partnered and Widow Allowance to $150 per fortnight from 1
April 2021 and cease indexation of the JobSeeker Payment income free area
- enable
a number of temporary COVID-19 measures to be extended.
The most significant measure in the Bill is the increase
in the basic rate of JobSeeker Payment and other payments. Over time the value
of payments to recipients of allowances such as JobSeeker Payment has fallen
relative to pensions and minimum wages.
The Government’s proposal to increase payment rates has
been criticised by non-government parties and by major interest groups on the
grounds that a $50 a fortnight increase is too low.
The digest explains how the Bill’s provisions operate and
provides details on the COVID-19 measures to be extended and the relevant provisions.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Social Services Legislation Amendment
(Strengthening Income Support) Bill 2021 (the Bill) is to amend the Social Security Act
1991 (the SS Act) to:
- increase
the maximum basic rates of JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance, Youth Disability
Support Pension, Parenting Payment and Austudy by $50 per fortnight from 1
April 2021
- increase
the ordinary income free area for JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance (Other), Parenting
Payment Partnered and Widow Allowance to $150 per fortnight from 1 April 2021 and
cease indexation of the JobSeeker Payment income free area
- extend
special COVID-19 qualification criteria for Youth Allowance (Other) and
JobSeeker Payment until 30 June 2021—the criteria cover those in quarantine or
self-isolation or caring for a family member or household member in quarantine
or self-isolation due to COVID-19
- extend
until 30 June 2021 the waiver of the ordinary waiting period for JobSeeker
Payment and Youth Allowance (Other)—the waiver was introduced as part of the
Government’s COVID-19 response, and
- give
the Secretary of the Department of Social Services the discretionary power—until
30 June 2021—to extend the portability period for certain Age Pension
and Disability Support Pension recipients unable to return to, or depart from,
Australia within 26 weeks due to the impact of COVID-19—portability determines
a person’s eligibility for a pension and payment rate when they live
permanently outside Australia.
The measures were announced on 23 February 2021.[1]
Structure of
the Bill and the Bills Digest
The Bill has one Schedule divided into five parts
proposing discrete measures. The Bills Digest will provide background to the
issue of JobSeeker Payment adequacy and COVID-19 social security measures. The
‘Key issues and provisions’ will provide detail on each of the five parts but focuses
primarily on the changes to payment rates and the income free area.
Background
Over recent decades, payments such as JobSeeker Payment
and Youth Allowance have fallen behind pensions, minimum wages and living
standards in the broader community.
As the relative value of payments has declined, the Government
has faced increasing pressure to raise the rate. Initially this came from
community sector organisations like the Australian Council of Social Service
(ACOSS), but eventually expanded to others such as the Business Council of
Australia, the Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia, and members of the
National Party.[2]
The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic shifted the debate.
Government actions to control the spread of the virus such as lockdowns, border
closures and social distancing requirements resulted in job losses. In response
the Australian Government introduced a number of measures including a temporary
Coronavirus Supplement of $550 a fortnight added to payments for recipients of
JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance and some other working age payments.[3]
On 23 February 2021, the Government announced a permanent
increase in ‘the rate of working-age payments by $50 a fortnight from 1 April
2021’.[4]
The rate increase will not apply to all payments those of working age can
receive—for example Disability Support Pension for those aged 21 years or more
and Carer Payment are excluded. Payments which will be increased include the
main benefit-type payments—JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance, Parenting
Payment, Disability Support Pension for those aged under 21 years, Austudy,
Special Benefit and ABSTUDY Living Allowance.
Payment adequacy
Why the value of unemployment
payments has fallen relative to pensions and minimum wages
Historically there has been a distinction between pensions
and benefits. Pensions were paid to claimants who were not expected to
work. This included the elderly, people with disabilities, and widows (later
extended to single parents). Benefits were paid to people who were
temporarily unable to work. This included people who were unemployed or sick.
Over time the distinction became more complicated.
Pensions were generally paid at a higher rate than
benefits. From the 1970s onwards, pensions rates began to be adjusted in a
different way from benefits.[5]
Pensions ended up being adjusted according to movements in the Consumer Price
Index (CPI) and benchmarked to a percentage of male total average weekly
earnings (MTAWE)—since 2009 pensions have been indexed to both the CPI and a
living cost index, the Pensioner and Beneficiary Living Cost Index (PBLCI). Benefits
have been indexed using the CPI alone.[6]
This meant that as living standards in the broader community rose as wages
increased, pensions also increased. Benefits, however, declined relative to
community living standards when wages rose.
The gap between pensions and benefits increased further in
2009 when the Government increased the single rate of payment by $32.49 per
week in response to the findings of the Pension Review led by departmental
secretary Jeff Harmer.[7]
The review was a response to community concerns that the rate of the pension
was inadequate.[8]
The single rate of unemployment benefit fell from around
93 per cent of the single rate of the pension in 1997 to around 66 per cent in
2020.[9]
According to researchers Peter Whiteford and Bruce Bradbury, unemployment benefits
fell from around 50 per cent of the minimum wage in 1997 to under 40 per cent in
the period before the addition of the Coronavirus Supplement.[10]
Current indexation arrangements mean that Parliament must
periodically pass legislation to increase benefits if it aims to prevent them
falling further behind pensions and wages (assuming wages increase).
Policy principles
The 2009 report of the Australia’s Future Tax System
Review (Henry Review) found that indexing payments ‘solely to prices can reduce
adequacy relative to members of the community who work’ and argued that benefit
type payments should be indexed to some measure of community standards rather
than CPI alone.[11]
Advocates of an increase argue that payments such as
JobSeeker Payment should be maintained at a rate that is adequate for a
recipient to meet basic needs.[12]
Poverty lines are sometimes used as a benchmark.[13]
However, the Department of Social Services (DSS) does not include reductions in
poverty as a performance criterion for income support payments.[14]
Even if policymakers accept adequacy as an objective, policymakers
may decide to balance it against other objectives. According to the Henry Review’s
report:
The primary focus of the income support system has been and
should continue to be the provision of a minimum adequate level of income to
people who are unable to support themselves through work or their savings. This
focus on payment adequacy, however, has to be balanced with incentives to work.
And payments need to be seen as affordable, sustainable and fair by the
community at large.[15]
Minister for Families and Social Services Anne Ruston has
taken a similar position saying that in making the decision to increase benefit
rates, the Government considered: ‘three key principles – our responsibility to
support unemployed Australians, to incentivise people to take up work and to
keep the welfare budget sustainable into the future’.[16]
Raise the Rate for Good campaign
For more than a decade ACOSS has been leading a campaign
to raise the rate of payments. In 2009, ACOSS called on the Government to
increase allowance payments for single people by $30 a week.[17]
Over time ACOSS adjusted this figure. In March 2020 they called for an increase
of $95 per week.[18]
In setting the most recent figure, ACOSS drew on budget
standards research conducted at the Social Policy Research Centre at the
University of New South Wales. According to researchers Peter Saunders and
Megan Bedford:
A budget standard indicates how much a particular family
living in a particular place at a particular time needs in order to achieve a
particular standard of living. It is derived by specifying every item that is
needed by the family and each of its members, pricing each item and summing to
produce the overall budget. The items included, how much they cost and how long
they last will vary according to the standard of living that the budget is designed
to support. Any budget is thus only relevant to a particular standard - hence
the term budget standard. The standard itself can (in principle at least) be
set at any level, although budget standards have traditionally been designed to
represent minimum standards by estimating how much is needed to achieve an
acceptable but minimal standard of living.[19]
The campaign’s approach shifted after the Government
introduced the $550 per fortnight Coronavirus Supplement in March 2020. The campaign’s
‘ask’ then became:
We can’t turn back to $40 a day. We need a permanent and
adequate increase that ensures people on JobSeeker, Youth Allowance and other
income support payments can cover the basics they need, including housing.[20]
A wide range of organisations have joined the Raise the
Rate for Good campaign. Supporters include community organisations, church
welfare organisations, unions and business groups. The campaign has also
attracted financial support from philanthropic trusts.[21]
The Government’s response to
COVID-19
By the end of February it was clear that measures to slow
the spread of COVID-19 would result in job losses and an economic slowdown. In
response, the Government initially developed two stimulus packages. In an
interview for Sky News, Minister for Families and Social Services Anne Ruston
did not rule out a permanent increase in unemployment payments but made it
clear that it would not be part of the stimulus. As she explained to journalist
Kieran Gilbert, the stimulus would be:
… a short term measured and proportionate response to the
economic conditions that we are encountering right now. And any long term
structural changes to anything that we're doing in this space will be the
subject of a separate conversation.[22]
The first stimulus package, announced on 12 March 2020,
included a one-off payment of $750 to recipients of income support payments (both
pensions and benefits), Family Tax Benefit recipients and Commonwealth Senior
Health Card holders.[23]
The second stimulus package, announced on 22 March, included the
Coronavirus Supplement and a second one-off payment of $750 to the same groups
as the first payment but excluding those eligible for the Coronavirus
Supplement. [24] The Government also
made a number of other temporary changes to payment eligibility and conditions.
The Coronavirus Supplement
Initially set at $550 per fortnight, the Coronavirus
Supplement was paid to recipients of JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance,
Parenting Payment, Austudy, ABSTUDY Living Allowance, Farm Household Allowance
and Special Benefit.[25]
Unlike an increase to the base rate of payment it was not income tested; if a
person was eligible for the supplement, they received the full amount.[26]
The Government announced that the supplement would be paid
for six months.[27]
However, the legislation implementing the payment provided that the initial
period would be for around five months, from 27 April 2020 to 24 September
2020.[28]
The supplement was later extended at a reduced rate of $250 per fortnight until
December 2020 and then extended again at a reduced rate of $150 per fortnight
until 31 March 2021.[29]
The supplement is legislated to cease from that date.[30]
Income test changes
In July 2020 the Government announced changes allowing
recipients of JobSeeker Payment and Youth Allowance (Other) to earn more
private income before their payments were reduced by the income test.[31]
The changes increased the amount of income an individual could receive before
the payment was affected—the income free area—from $106 per fortnight to $300
per fortnight for JobSeeker Payment and from $143 per fortnight to $300 per
fortnight for Youth Allowance (Other). The rate at which payment rates were
reduced (the taper rate) was changed from 50 cents for each dollar over
the free area and 60 cents for each dollar over the upper income test threshold
($256 for JobSeeker Payment and $250 for Youth Allowance (Other)), to a single
taper rate of 60 cents for each dollar of income over the free area.[32]
These changes applied initially from 25 September 2020 to
31 December 2020 but were extended until 31 March 2020.[33]
Separate income test changes were made to the way a
payment recipient’s partner’s income was assessed for JobSeeker Payment.
Initially, from 27 April to 24 September 2020, the taper rate for partner
income was reduced from 60 cents to 25 cents for each dollar of income over the
partner income free area ($996 per fortnight).[34]
From 25 September this was changed to a taper rate of 27 cents for each
dollar of income over a partner income free area of $1,165 per fortnight. The
partner income test changes were initially extended to 31 December 2020 but
will now cease on 31 March 2021.[35]
Expanding eligibility
From 25 March 2020, the Government temporarily expanded
eligibility for JobSeeker Payment and Youth Allowance (Other) to include:
- sole
traders and self-employed people who had lost revenue due to COVID-19—enabling
them to meet mutual obligation requirements by continuing to operate their
businesses
- permanent
employees who have been stood down or lost their job
- people
in quarantine or self-isolation as a result of advice from a health
professional or a requirement by a government (Commonwealth, state or
territory)
- people
caring for someone infected or in isolation as a result of contact with
Coronavirus.[36]
From 25 March the Government also waived a number of waiting
periods that usually apply to those claiming social security payments. This
included the Ordinary Waiting Period for JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance
(Other) and Parenting Payment and the Newly Arrived Residents Waiting Period
for JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance, Austudy, Parenting Payment, Special
Benefit and Farm Household Allowance.[37]
The Ordinary Waiting Period is a one-week period claimants
have to wait before their payment starts. In some circumstances the waiting
period can be waived.[38]
The Newly Arrived Residents Waiting Period, which applies to new migrants, is
usually four years for the payments listed above.[39]
Some groups are exempt from this waiting period.[40]
Both the expanded eligibility criteria and the waiting
period waivers were due to end on 24 September 2021 but were later
extended: firstly to 31 December 2020 and then to 31 March 2021.[41]
Separate waivers of the assets test for JobSeeker Payment,
Parenting Payment, Youth Allowance, Austudy and ABSTUDY Living Allowance; and
the Liquid Assets Waiting Period for JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance and
Austudy were in place for the 25 March to 24 September 2020 period but were not
extended.[42]
Extending the portability period
Portability refers to the eligibility conditions for a
social security payment while an individual is overseas.[43]
As part of the response to COVID-19 the Government allowed Age Pension
recipients and certain Disability Support Pension recipients who are
temporarily overseas to apply for a portability extension if they are unable to
return to Australia within 26 weeks because of COVID-19.[44]
Absences outside Australia for longer than 26 weeks can affect a person’s
payment rate (see ‘Key issues and provisions’ section below). Some pensioners
who normally reside overseas and were unable to leave Australia and return home
were also granted an extension to the period they could remain in Australia
before certain grandfathering provisions protecting them from previous
portability changes would no longer apply.
Changes were made to the portability provisions in the SS
Act via the Social
Security (Coronavirus Economic Response—2020 Measures No. 10)
Determination 2020 and the Social Security
(Coronavirus Economic Response—2020 Measures No. 16) Determination 2020.
The changes in the latter determination will expire on 31 March 2021.
Committee
consideration
The Bill was referred to the Senate Community Affairs
Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 12 March 2021. The Committee
tabled its report on 12 March 2021. Details of the inquiry are available at the
inquiry
homepage.
Neither the Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny
of Bills nor the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights had
reported on their consideration of the bill at the time this digest was
prepared.
Senate Community Affairs
Legislation Committee
Committee report
The Committee recommended that the Bill be passed.
Commenting on the Bill’s proposed increase to payment rates and changes to the
income free threshold, the Committee’s report stated:
… the committee is of the view that the taxpayer-funded
increase of $50 to income support payments balances the need to ensure payments
encourage and enable workforce participation with the need for the welfare
system to be fiscally sustainable for future generations. In addition, the Bill
will raise the threshold before benefits start to taper off, enabling
recipients to earn more before their payments are decreased. This provides the
right balance of supports and encouraged people to engage in the workforce.[45]
Labor Senator’s additional comments
Drawing on evidence provided to the Committee during the
inquiry, Labor Senators highlighted concerns about the adequacy of payments,
the income free area, indexation, and changes to mutual obligation
requirements. However, the Senators noted that if the ‘Bill does not pass the
Parliament in the next sitting week, current legislative settings mean that
payment rates will revert to pre-pandemic levels by the end of March’.[46]
Labour Senators recommended:
- the
Senate does not stand in the way of the modest increase in payments contained
in this Bill
- the
Senate notes the strong concerns of the community, businesses, experts and
service delivery organisations that:
- the
income Free Area proposed in the Bill does not allow people to keep enough of
their earnings from part-time, casual, or seasonal work, to effectively help
people move into employment; and
- the
Bill does not do enough to support Australians facing poverty and hardship –
including in the areas of adequate payments to those who need them, housing,
addressing child poverty, and better health and education services.
- the
Government abandon its counterproductive and punitive plans for a hotline for
employers to report people who haven’t agreed to a job – regardless of the
reason – that will inevitably see the Government
hound people, rather than help the 2 million Australians currently
looking for work.[47]
The last recommendation refers to the Government’s
announcement of a hotline that will allow employers to report income support
recipients who have refused an offer of suitable employment.[48]
Dissenting report by the Australian
Greens
In their dissenting report the Australian Greens argued
that income support payments should be set at a level that lifts recipients
above the poverty line. The report made four recommendations:
- the
Bill be amended to increase all income support payments to $1,115 a fortnight,
which is in line with the Henderson Poverty Line
- the
Bill be amended to retain the current income free threshold of $300 a fortnight
- that
compulsory income management be abolished
- that
mutual obligations be abolished.[49]
The last two recommendations deal with matters outside the
scope of this Bill.
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
In their public comments, non-government parties and
independents have focused on the Bill’s increase to the rate of Jobseeker
Payment.
Both Labor and the Australian Greens support an increase
to the rate of Jobseeker Payment but argue that the increase is not enough.
Labor’s Shadow Treasurer Jim Chalmers said ‘Any increase
is better than no increase’ and indicated that Labor was ‘not going to stand in
the way of an increase in the JobSeeker payment’.[50]
Greens Senator Rachel Siewert described the increase as ‘mean-spirited, cruel
and in fact insulting to jobseekers’.[51]
Position of
major interest groups
As with comments by non-government parties and
independents commentary by major interest groups focused on the rate of
Jobseeker Payment, however some groups have also commented on other parts of
the Bill.
The adequacy of the increase to
payments
ACOSS has described the increase in JobSeeker Payment as
‘measly’. According to a 23 February 2021 media release, ACOSS Chief
Executive Officer Cassandra Goldie said:
This is a heartless betrayal of millions of people with the
least, including hundreds of thousands of children, single parents, people with
disability, older people, students, people dealing with illness and injury, and
others relying on income support.
Today, the Government has turned its back on those with the
least, plunging people further into poverty. It’s a cruel decision that shows a
complete lack of humanity and empathy. It comes as devastating news for so many
and will have serious consequences for people’s lives, including homelessness
and crushing debt.[52]
Beyond the community sector, a number of other
organisations have also argued for a higher rate of JobSeeker Payment. In a
September 2020 budget submission the Business Council of Australia (BCA)
recommended that the ‘permanent rate of JobSeeker should be set at levels more
consistent with historical relativities with the Age Pension’. The submission
argued:
While the rate of JobSeeker will need to return to long run
levels, the longer-term rate should be reconsidered. The Newstart rate for
single people that applied pre-crisis had fallen in relative terms over time,
from around 90 per cent of the Age Pension to around 60 per cent, with
indexation arrangements that would ensure it continued to fall in relative
terms over time.
To support unemployed Australians and ensure nobody gets left
behind, the rate of JobSeeker should be set at levels more consistent with
historical relativities with the Age Pension (in the 75–90 per cent range). A
JobSeeker rate in this range (which is around 50 per cent of the minimum wage)
would address the need to preserve incentives to work while improving the
adequacy of the payment.[53]
In contrast, in July 2020 Robert Carling of the Centre for
Independent Studies argued that ‘Nothing has fallen apart because there have
not been real increases’ in unemployment payments and that a permanent increase
in the payment rate would ‘go against the government’s mantra that all extra
spending in this crisis is “temporary and targeted”.’[54]
Alternative proposals
In its submission to the Senate inquiry on the Bill, ACOSS
argued that income support payments should be set at at least $65 a day with
supplementary payments for additional costs. These payments include JobSeeker
Payment, Youth Allowance, Parenting Payment, Austudy, Abstudy, Special Benefit
and Crisis Payment:
People on JobSeeker need at least $65 a day to feed and
clothe themselves, as well as keep a roof over their heads. In addition,
supplementary payments must be available to meet additional costs faced by
people in private rental, people with an illness or disability and single
parents.[55]
ACOSS propose a 50 per cent increase in Commonwealth Rent
Assistance, a Disability and Illness Supplement (set at at least $50 per week)
and a Single Parent Supplement (set at least $200 per week). [56]
The Grattan Institute propose an increase of $100 per
week:
The Government should increase the permanent rate of
JobSeeker not by $25 a week as it has announced, but by at least $100 a week
for singles. An increase of $100 a week would restore the unemployment benefit
to a similar level, relative to full-time wages, as 1994. It would be a little
higher, relative to full-time wages, as in July 2000, when the benefit was
increased as part of GST compensation.[57]
The Council for Single Mothers and their Children stressed
the importance of support for parents:
If the rate of JobSeeker cannot be raised overall, we implore
Senators and Members to ensure that this Bill is amended such that all
JobSeeker and other payments to parents lift families well above the poverty
line so both the parents and children have a chance to find a better life.[58]
Indexation
A number of submissions argued that payments such as
JobSeeker needed to be indexed in a way that prevents them from falling behind
community living standards in the future. For example, ACOSS argued it is
‘crucial that wage indexation is applied to working-age payments so that they
do not fall so far behind community living standards again.[59]
The Grattan Institute argued against the Government’s approach of indexing
JobSeeker Payment to the Consumer Price Index:
The first problem with CPI indexation is that the CPI
understates the change in the cost of living for allowance recipients. The
second, more important, problem is that CPI indexation means that a person on
the unemployment benefit falls further and further behind other members of the
community, including pensioners. This also creates incentives for people to
seek to claim higher-paying disability pensions.
The Government’s plan to increase JobSeeker does nothing to
fix these problems. JobSeeker will still be benchmarked to inflation, rather
than wages. This means that over time, people on JobSeeker will again fall
further behind the living standards of other Australians.[60]
Grattan proposed setting JobSeeker Payment in the same way
as the Age Pension.[61]
Incentives to work
A number of organisations took issue with claims that a
significant increase to JobSeeker Payment would discourage recipients from
finding employment. For example, in their submission, Mission Australia stated:
The Government … argued that higher income support rates can
act as a disincentive for people to find employment. This is not the case.
Economic modelling has found that increasing income support payments will not
act as a disincentive to work, and did not do so even during the time the
highest level of Coronavirus Supplement was applied. On the contrary, higher
income support levels facilitate job seeking as they provide resources for
people to pay associated costs including transport and clothing for interviews.[62]
The St Vincent de Paul Society and the Grattan Institute
also rejected the argument that increasing payments would significantly reduce
work incentives.[63]
The best form of welfare is a job?
Critics of increases in the rate of unemployment payments
sometimes argue that a better way to improve the wellbeing of unemployed income
support recipients is to help them find work. Some organisations argued that
there are not enough jobs available to make this approach work. For example,
the St Vincent de Paul Society argue:
The rhetoric that ‘the best form of income support is a job’
is not palatable when there remain nine people either applying or looking to
increase their hours for every job advertised; when the increase in the labour
market has been in casual and part-time work; and when the income of
Australia’s youth has stagnated during this century.[64]
Similarly, the Financial Counselling Network argued that
if ‘full employment’ means unemployment does not fall below 4 or 5 per cent, a
large number of Australians will need to rely on income support. [65]
Waiting period and income taper
rates
ACOSS welcomed the Government’s waiver of the one-week
waiting period for JobSeeker Payment and Youth Allowance but argued that the
Bill’s temporary extension of the waiver should be permanent. [66]
On changes to the income free area, ACOSS’ submission
registered concern:
… many will be worse off as a result of the reduction in the
current $300 a fortnight income free-area. ACOSS has previously recommended
that people on JobSeeker Payment be able to earn more than $52pw before their
income support tapers off, and has proposed an income bank model similar to
that available for people receiving Youth Allowance (Student/Apprentice) to
better support people who have some paid work.
[67]
Financial
implications
According to the Minister’s second reading speech, the
‘policy delivered by this bill carries a cost of approximately $9 billion to
2024–25, including approximately $700 million in 2020–21.’[68]
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed the
Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared
in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. The
Government considers that the Bill is compatible.[69]
Key issues
and provisions
Part 1—Increasing working age
payments
Is adequacy an objective?
Much of the advocacy for an increased rate of JobSeeker
Payment and other working age payments assumes that considerations such as work
incentives and financial sustainability should not trump adequacy. However,
official statements of program objectives suggest the Government places greater
relative weight on objectives such as financial sustainability than on adequacy.
In 1998 one of the objectives listed in the Department of
Social Security’s annual report was ‘unemployed people receive adequate levels
of income to support themselves’.[70]
This no longer appears as an objective in the most recent Department of Social
Services annual reports.
The current set of objectives place more emphasis on
containing the cost of payments. An objective of the payments system as a whole
is ‘sustainability’ measured in terms of the future lifetime cost of payments
to individuals. An objective for working age payments is the extent to which
payment recipients have improved financial self-reliance.[71]
The minimum wage as a benchmark
While there is no officially recognised benchmark for
measuring changes in the adequacy of income support payments, ministers have
compared payments to the minimum wage. For example, the Prime Minister recently
noted that the increased rate of JobSeeker Payment brings it to 41.2 per cent
of the national minimum wage:
… which puts us back in the realm of where we had been
previously. The indexation had been different to other payments and, as a
result, it had fallen down to 37.5%. We had obviously taken advice about the
level of the payment and this puts it back, comfortably, within the middle of
the range that had previously been in place.[72]
However, since the Bill does not change the way payments
are indexed, over time payments such as JobSeeker Payment can be expected to
again fall behind minimum wages.
Figure 1 (below) shows the single rate of Newstart
Allowance/JobSeeker Payment and the Age Pension as a proportion of the minimum
wage. The large increase in the rate of the Age Pension as a proportion of the
minimum wage in 2009 is the result of a one-off increase in the single rate of
the pension by $32.49 per week in response to the findings of the Pension
Review.[73]
Figure 1: single JobSeeker Payment/Newstart
Allowance and Age Pension rates as a share of the National Minimum Wage
Sources: DSS, ‘5.2 Historical
rates’, Social security guide, DSS website, last reviewed 9 November
2020; Fair Work Commission (FWC), ‘The
Australian Minimum Wage from 1906’, FWC
website, last updated 12 July 2019; R Bray, Reflections
on the Evolution of the Minimum Wage in Australia: Options for the Future,
Working paper, Crawford School Social Policy Institute, 1, 2013, October 2013.
Note: chart uses the base rate of the unemployment benefit/Newstart
Allowance/JobSeeker Payment and Age Pension and does not include supplementary
payments.
Key provisions
Items 1–10 amend payment rates set out in the SS
Act rate calculators for Youth Disability Support Pension, Youth Allowance,
Austudy, JobSeeker Payment (as well as Partner Allowance and Widow Allowance)
and Parenting Payment. The proposed increase to all rates is $50 per fortnight.
A number of other payments have their rates linked to the
JobSeeker Payment and Youth Allowance rates and will also benefit from the $50
per fortnight increase: Farm Household Allowance, Disaster Recovery Allowance
and education allowances paid as part of the veterans’ education schemes.[74]
The Explanatory Memorandum notes that equivalent increases will be made to the
rate of ABSTUDY Living Allowance and to Special Benefit.[75]
ABSTUDY payment rates are set out in the ABSTUDY Policy Manual while Special
Benefit is paid at a discretionary rate but cannot be more than the rate of
JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance or Austudy the person would otherwise
receive.[76]
Table 1 sets out a selection of the current and proposed
payment rates.
Table 1: current payment rate and
proposed payment rates from 1 April 2021
Payment |
Current per fortnight |
1 April 2021 per fortnight |
JobSeeker Payment, single |
$565.70 |
$620.80 |
JobSeeker Payment, single with dependent child |
$612.00 |
$667.50 |
JobSeeker Payment, partnered |
$510.80 |
$565.40 |
Parenting Payment Single |
$768.90 |
$825.80 |
Parenting Payment Partnered |
$510.80 |
$565.40 |
Youth Allowance, under 18 at home |
$253.20 |
$303.20 |
Youth Allowance, under 18–21 at home |
$304.60 |
$354.60 |
Youth Allowance, away from home |
$462.50 |
$512.50 |
Youth Allowance, single with dependent child |
$606.00 |
$656.00 |
Youth Allowance, partnered |
$462.50 |
$512.50 |
Youth Allowance, partnered with dependent child |
$507.90 |
$557.90 |
Austudy, single |
$462.50 |
$512.50 |
Austudy, single with dependent child |
$606.00 |
$656.00 |
Austudy, partnered |
$462.50 |
$512.50 |
Austudy, partnered with dependent child |
$507.90 |
$557.90 |
Long term student: Austudy single or Youth Allowance
single away from home |
$561.90 |
$611.90 |
Long term student: Austudy or Youth Allowance partnered |
$507.90 |
$557.90 |
Disability Support Pension, not independent, living at
home, aged under 18 |
$385.10 |
$435.10 |
Disability Support Pension, living at home, aged 18–20 |
$436.50 |
$486.50 |
Disability Support Pension, under 21, independent or
partnered |
$594.40 |
$644.40 |
Notes: Rates are maximum basic rates excluding any
supplementary amounts. JobSeeker Payment and Parenting Payment rates include
indexation increase to occur on 20 March 2020. Disability Support Pension rates
include the Youth Disability Supplement.
Sources: DSS, Enhanced
social security safety net, DSS, Canberra, 24 February 2021; DSS, Indexation
rates March 2021, DSS, Canberra, 8 March 2021.
Items 1–2 replace the tables setting out the rates
of Disability Support Pension paid to those under 21 years in various
circumstances at Point 1066A-B1 (table B) and Point 1066B-B1 (table
B) of the SS Act.
Items 3–5 replace the tables setting out the rates
of Youth Allowance paid to those in various circumstances at Point 1067G-B2
(table BA), Point 1067G-B3 (table BB) and Point 1067G-B4 (table BC).
Items 6–7 replace the tables setting out the rates
of Austudy paid to those in various circumstances at Subpoint 1067L-B2(1)
(table BA) and Point 1067L-B3 (table BB).
Item 8 replaces the table setting out the rates of
JobSeeker Payment, Widow Allowance and Partner Allowance paid to those in
various circumstances at Point 1068-B1 (table B). The new rates include
the rate increase occurring on 20 March 2021 due to automatic indexation
to movements in the Consumer Price Index.
Item 9 replaces the provision setting the rate of
Parenting Payment Single at Point 1068A-B1. The new rates include the
rate increase occurring on 20 March 2021 due to automatic indexation to
movements in the Consumer Price Index.
Item 10 replaces the provision setting out the
rates of Parenting Payment Partnered paid to those in various circumstances at Point
1068B-C2 (table C). The new rates include the rate increase occurring on
20 March 2021 due to automatic indexation to movements in the Consumer
Price Index.
Part 2—Qualification for Youth Allowance
or JobSeeker Payment—coronavirus
The amendments in Part 2 of Schedule 1 add new, temporary,
COVID-19-related qualification criteria for Youth Allowance (Other) and
JobSeeker Payment to the SS Act. The amendments are a more limited
version of criteria introduced as part of the Government’s COVID-19 response
and set out in a legislative instrument which will expire on 31 March 2021.
The Coronavirus
Economic Response Package Omnibus Act 2020 gave the Minister for
Families and Social Services the power to make a legislative instrument to
determine eligibility requirements for Youth Allowance (Other) and JobSeeker
Payment in response to circumstances relating to COVID-19.[77]
The eligibility requirements could only apply for the period that the
Coronavirus Supplement is paid. The instrument providing for the
COVID-19-related eligibility requirements is the Social Security
(Coronavirus Economic Response—2020 Measures No. 2) Determination 2020.
The Social Services
and Other Legislation Amendment (Extension of Coronavirus Support) Act 2020
repeals all provisions relating to the Coronavirus Supplement from 1 April
2021, including the Minister’s power to determine eligibility criteria relating
to COVID-19.[78]
The eligibility
criteria for JobSeeker Payment and Youth Allowance (Other) generally require a
person to be unemployed or be considered unemployed by Services Australia for
the purposes of these criteria—this discretion can be used to allow someone in
part-time work to qualify for the payment where they are also meeting their
mutual obligation requirements to look for more work or for a full-time
position.[79]
The expanded eligibility criteria in response to COVID-19 were necessary to
ensure those who were still ‘employed’ or were previously self-employed, but
who had temporarily lost hours of work and income, could qualify for income
support.
The proposed criteria to be included in the SS Act
are different from those in the Social Security
(Coronavirus Economic Response—2020 Measures No. 2) Determination 2020 as
they do not cover those who, as a result of the adverse economic effects of
COVID-19:
- were
made unemployed
- were
stood down but not made redundant
- lost
hours of work or
- were
sole traders/self employed individuals forced to suspend their business or who
had a downturn in revenue.
The proposed criteria only cover those affected by a
self-isolation or quarantine requirement issued by the Commonwealth, a state or
territory government, or a health professional in relation to COVID-19. The
previous criteria included those affected by the economic impacts of COVID-19
and those affected by health orders to self-isolate or quarantine, while the
criteria from 1 April 2021 is targeted at those affected by COVID-19
health orders. Those unemployed may still qualify for JobSeeker Payment or
Youth Allowance (Other) under the normal qualification criteria for these
payments.
Key provisions
Item 13
inserts new section 540BA and item 14 inserts new subsection
593(5) which set out the temporary COVID-19 qualification criteria for
Youth Allowance (Other) and JobSeeker Payment, respectively. The eligibility
criteria apply for the period 1 April 2021 to 30 June 2021 and cover those
required to self-isolate or quarantine due to COVID-19; or those caring for an
immediate family member or member of their household who is required to
self-isolate or quarantine where:
- the
Secretary of the Department of Social Services is satisfied that the person has
had their working hours reduced due to quarantining, self-isolation or caring
for someone who is
- the
person satisfies the activity test or is not required to satisfy the activity
test
- the
Secretary of the Department of Social Services is satisfied that the person:
- is
not entitled to receive a leave payment in respect of the period for which the
payment is claimed
- has
taken reasonable steps to claim any leave payment
- is
receiving a leave payment but it is less that it would have otherwise been due
to the economic effects of COVID-19 or
- the
total leave payment is less than the amount of Youth Allowance/JobSeeker
Payment the person would receive if their claim was granted; and
- the
person is an Australian resident or is exempt from the residency requirements.
Age requirements determine whether the person is eligible
for Youth Allowance or JobSeeker Payment in these circumstances: those aged at
least 22 years but under Age Pension age are eligible for JobSeeker Payment
while those aged 16–21 years are eligible for Youth Allowance (individuals aged
15 years may be eligible in special circumstances).[80]
Part 3—Ordinary waiting period
The amendments in Part 3 of Schedule 1 extend the waiver
of the ordinary waiting period for JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance (Other)
and Parenting Payment to 30 June 2021. The ordinary waiting period delays the
start date for these payments by one week (other waiting periods can also
apply).[81]
The Coronavirus
Economic Response Package Omnibus Act 2020 waived the one-week
‘ordinary waiting period’ that applies to JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance
(Other) and Parenting Payment for the period that the Coronavirus Supplement is
paid. The waiver of this waiting period was extended with the Coronavirus
Supplement, apart from the extension that applied from 1 January 2021 to
31 March 2021. The extension of the ordinary waiting period waiver in 2021 was
made using the instrument making power under section 1262 of the SS Act
inserted by the Social
Services and Other Legislation Amendment (Extension of Coronavirus Support) Act
2020—the instrument is the Social Security
(Coronavirus Economic Response—2020 Measures No. 16) Determination 2020.
Section 1262 allows the Minister for Families and Social Services to amend specific
provisions of the SS Act via legislative instrument. However, any amendment
made using this power ceases to have effect after 31 March 2021.
Key provisions
Items 15–20 provide for the ordinary waiting period
to not apply to any claimants for Parenting Payment, Youth Allowance (Other) or
JobSeeker Payment for the period 1 April 2021 to 30 June 2021.
Part 4—Income free areas and taper
rates
The amendments in Part 4 of Schedule 1 permanently
increase the income free area for Youth Allowance (Other), JobSeeker Payment
(except principal carer parents), Parenting Payment Partnered, Partner
Allowance and Widow Allowance to $150 per fortnight from 1 April 2021. The
amendments also cease indexation of the free area for JobSeeker Payment,
Parenting Payment Partnered, Widow Allowance and Partner Allowance.
The income free area is the amount of income an individual
can receive per fortnight before their payment is reduced under the income
test. Income over the free area reduces the rate of these payments by 50 cents per
dollar (this rate of reduction is known as the taper rate). There is also a
higher threshold over which a taper rate of 60 cents for each dollar applies.[82]
The higher threshold from 1 April 2021 will be $256 per fortnight for all the
listed payments except for Youth Allowance (Other) which will be $250 per
fortnight.
Prior to 25 September 2020 the income free area for the
payments other than Youth Allowance (Other) was $106 per fortnight. Youth
Allowance (Other) had a higher free area of $143 per fortnight. On 21 July
2020, the Government announced a temporary increase in the free area for
JobSeeker Payment and Youth Allowance (Other) to $300 per fortnight.[83]
The increase was to apply from 25 September to 31 December 2020 but was later
extended to 31 March 2021.[84]
History
The income free area for JobSeeker Payment (and related
payments) has rarely changed since the unemployment benefit was introduced in
1945. When it has changed it has been with the intention of encouraging
jobseekers to take up part-time work and to help recipients avoid poverty traps
(where the income test combined with income tax result in very little return
from work).[85]
In 2014, the income free area for JobSeeker Payment’s predecessor Newstart
Allowance (together with Parenting Payment Partnered, Widow Allowance and
Partner Allowance) was increased from $62 to $100 per fortnight. This was the
first increase since 2000, when it was increased from $60 to $62 as part of the
GST compensation package.[86]
The $60 free area had been in place since May 1986.
Also in 2014, the
income free area began to be annually adjusted in line with movements in the
Consumer Price Index. Indexation was paused for three years from 1 July 2017 as
part of a savings measure included in the Social Services
Legislation Amendment Act 2017.
Comparison of pre- and
post-COVID-19 income test settings with proposed changes
Table 2 sets out previous income test settings, the
temporary increase as part of the Government’s COVID-19 response, and the
changes proposed in Part 4 of Schedule 1 to the Bill.
Table 2: income test settings for
JobSeeker Payment and Youth Allowance (Other)
Payment |
July–September 2020 |
September 2020–March 2021 |
From 1 April 2021 |
JobSeeker Payment, Parenting Payment Partnered, Partner
Allowance and Widow Allowance
|
Free area of $106 per fortnight.
Taper rate of 50 cents per dollar of income between $106
and $256 per fortnight
Taper rate of 60 cents per dollar over $256 per fortnight.
Free area adjusted on 1 July each year in line with
movements in the CPI. Higher threshold set at $150 above the free area.
|
Free area of $300 per fortnight.
Taper rate of 60 cents per dollar of income over $300 per
fortnight.
|
Free area of $150 per fortnight.
Taper rate of 50 cents per dollar of income between $150
and $256 per fortnight.
Taper rate of 60 cents per dollar over $256 per fortnight.
No annual adjustment of the free area.
|
JobSeeker Payment for a single principal carer
|
Free area of $106 per fortnight. Taper rate of 40 cents
per dollar of income over $106 per fortnight.
Free area adjusted on 1 July each year in line with
movements in the CPI.
|
Free area of $106 per fortnight. Taper rate of 40 cents
per dollar of income over $106 per fortnight.
Free area adjusted on 1 July each year in line with
movements in the CPI.
|
Free area of $150 per fortnight. Taper rate of 40 cents
per dollar of income over $150 per fortnight.
No annual adjustment of the free area.
|
Youth Allowance (Other)
|
Free area of $143 per fortnight.
Taper rate of 50 cents per dollar of income between $143
and $250 per fortnight
Taper rate of 60 cents per dollar over $250 per fortnight.
No annual adjustment.
|
Free area of $300 per fortnight.
Taper rate of 60 cents per dollar of income over $300 per fortnight.
|
Free area of $150 per fortnight.
Taper rate of 50 cents per dollar of income between $150
and $250 per fortnight.
Taper rate of 60 cents per dollar over $250 per fortnight.
No annual adjustment.
|
Source: DSS, ‘4.10.2
Historical unemployment & sickness benefit income test’, Social
security guide, DSS website, last reviewed 1 July 2020; SA, A
guide to Australian Government payments: 1 July–19 September 2020, SA,
Canberra, 2020, pp. 38–40; SA, A
guide to Australian Government payments: 1 January to 19 March 2021,
SA, Canberra, 2021, pp. 39–41.
Lack of indexation for the income
free area
Figure 2 (below) shows how earnings affect the rate of
payment under the temporary COVID-19 response measures, the proposed settings
under the Bill and the situation without the COVID-19 measures.
Changes to the income free area and the increase in the
maximum rate mean that recipients with earnings will be better off than under
the pre-COVID-19 settings, but will receive lower levels of support compared to
the COVID-19 settings.
The removal of indexation means that the increased support
and work incentive offered by the higher free area will erode over time as its
real value is not maintained.
Figure 2: JobSeeker Payment rate
under different COVID-19 settings and proposed settings from April 2021
(single, no dependent children)
Notes: JobSeeker Payment rate
includes Energy Supplement and any applicable Coronavirus Supplement rate (but
excludes Rent Assistance and other supplementary payments payable in some
circumstances). ‘Without COVID-19 measures’ is an estimate for the period
20 March 2020 to 19 March 2021 excluding the Coronavirus
Supplement and the changes to the income test from 25 September 2020 to 31
March 2021.
Source: Parliamentary Library estimates.
Key provisions
Item 21 changes the ordinary income free area for
Youth Allowance (Other) at point 1067G-H29 of the SS Act from
$143 to $150.
Item 22 changes the amount of excess income allowed
before the higher taper rate of 60 per cent applies to Youth Allowance (Other),
at paragraph 1067G-H32(c) and 1067G-H33(c), from $107 to $100.
This maintains the current upper income test threshold at $250 for Youth
Allowance (Other).
Item 23 changes the ordinary income free area for
JobSeeker Payment at point 1068-G12 to $150.
Item 24 repeals the note at point 1068-G12
which states that the free area is indexed in line with CPI increases.
Item 26 changes the amount of excess income allowed
before the higher taper rate of 60 per cent applies to JobSeeker Payment, at points
1068-G15 and 1068-G16 to $106. This maintains the upper income test
threshold at the current rate of $256.
Items 27–30 make similar amendments to the
Parenting Payment Partnered free area and upper income test threshold.
Items 31 and 32 repeal the indexation provisions
for the JobSeeker Payment, Parenting Payment Partnered, Widow Allowance and
Partner Allowance income test free area at section 1190 (table item 20AAA)
and subsection 1191(1) (table item 14AAA).
Part 5—Portability
The amendments in Part 5 of Schedule 1 provide the
Secretary of the Department of Social Services with a temporary discretionary
power to extend the portability period for certain Age Pension and Disability
Support Pension recipients who are unable to return to, or depart from,
Australia within 26 weeks because of the impact of COVID-19. The Secretary’s
power will expire on 30 June 2021.
Portability refers to the eligibility conditions for a
social security payment while an individual is overseas.[87]
Some social security payments have limited portability and can only be receive
for short periods while a person is temporarily overseas and some may only
provide portability in special circumstances. Other payments, such as the Age
Pension, have unlimited portability and a person can continue to receive the
Age Pension while living permanently outside Australia. The Disability Support
Pension has different portability conditions depending on an individual’s
circumstances:
- people
who are permanently and severely impaired and have no future work capacity may
be eligible for unlimited portability
- people
with terminal illnesses who return to their country of origin to be near or
with a family member may be eligible for unlimited portability
- other
DSP recipients generally have a portability period of up to four weeks in any
12-month period (four week periods separate from this general period can be
granted for specific purposes such as medical treatment or family crises).[88]
While a person may be eligible for a payment under the
portability rules, their pension rate can be affected after a certain period of
time outside of Australia depending on the time they spent residing in
Australia during their working life (between the age of 16 and Age Pension
age). This period of residence in Australia is known as their Australian
Working Life Residence (AWLR). Those with less than 35 years AWLR will, after
26 weeks overseas, have their payment reduced to a rate equivalent to the
proportion of 35 years their AWLR represents.[89]
For example, a person with 16 years of AWLR will receive around 46 per
cent of the rate otherwise payable if they resided in Australia. Those with 35
years or more AWLR residence will not have their payment reduced.
Some Disability Support Pension recipients with unlimited
portability may be exempt from the AWLR rate reduction.[90]
In response to COVID-19-related overseas travel
restrictions, the Australian Government provided extended portability periods
to those pensioners unable to return to or depart from Australia within 26
weeks. Some pensioners face issues with being unable to depart because they are
part of groups grandfathered from previous changes to portability.[91]
These groups only remain covered by the grandfathering provisions if they have
not returned to Australia since that date for a continuous period of 26 weeks
or more.[92]
Changes were made to the portability provisions in the SS Act for those
outside Australia unable to return and those in Australia unable to depart via
the Social Security
(Coronavirus Economic Response—2020 Measures No. 10) Determination 2020
and the Social
Security (Coronavirus Economic Response—2020 Measures No. 16)
Determination 2020. The changes in the latter determination will expire on
31 March 2021.
The amendments proposed in items 35–37 will enable
the Secretary to determine a different portability period where the relevant
26-week period ends on or after 11 March 2020 and:
- the
Secretary is satisfied the person’s absence from Australia is temporary and
- the
Secretary is satisfied the person in unable to return to Australia before the
end of the 26‑week period because of the impact of COVID-19.
The different period set by the Secretary cannot end after
30 June 2021.
Similar amendments are made for those in Australia at risk
of losing their grandfathered status by items 38 and 39—the Secretary
can determine a different period the person can remain in Australia before they
lose their grandfathered status. The Secretary must be satisfied of the same
conditions listed above and cannot set a period that ends after 30 June 2021.
Concluding comments
The end of the $150 per fortnight Coronavirus Supplement
on 31 March 2021 will have an immediate impact on recipients of the affected
payments. This will only be partially cushioned by the $50 per fortnight
permanent increase proposed by the Bill. If the Bill passes it is likely that
advocacy groups will continue to campaign for further increases in the base
rate of payment.
The Bill does not address the reason payments such as
JobSeeker Payment have fallen in value relative to pensions and the minimum
wage—the way payments are indexed. If wages increase over time, payments
indexed to the CPI are likely to fall behind pensions and the minimum wage.