Key points
- The Social Services and Other Legislation Amendment (More Support in the Safety Net) Bill 2024 (the Bill) implements three 2024–25 budget measures:
- increasing the maximum rates of Commonwealth Rent Assistance by 10%
- increasing the JobSeeker Payment rate for recipients who have an assessed partial capacity to work of 0–14 hours per week and
- providing more flexibility for Carer Payment recipients to undertake work and study without losing qualification for the payment.
- The first 2 measures will have effect from 20 September 2024; the Carer Payment measure will have effect from 20 March 2025.
- The increase to maximum Rent Assistance rates will cost $1.9 billion over 5 years from 2023–24 with the other 2 measures costing a combined $59.8 million over the same period.
- The Rent Assistance increase follows a 15% increase in maximum rates which took effect on 20 September 2023.
- Stakeholders expressed dissatisfaction at the size of the recent and proposed increase and renewed longstanding calls for a review of the supplement to address issues with eligibility, adequacy and indexation.
- The JobSeeker Payment rate increase will benefit an estimated 4,700 individuals. This is equivalent to 1.3% of those currently on JobSeeker Payment with an assessed capacity to work of less than 30 hours a week due to an impairment. Tightened eligibility for the Disability Support Pension has led to a growing number of people with disability on the lower-rate JobSeeker Payment.
- Stakeholders have been calling for more flexibility for carers to do paid work and study without losing their Carer Payment for a long time.
Introductory Info
Date introduced: 29 May 2024
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Social Services
Commencement: Royal Assent
Purpose of the Bill
The Social
Services and Other Legislation Amendment (More Support in the Safety Net) Bill
2024 (the Bill) amends the Social
Security Act 1991 (the SS Act), the Social
Security (Administration) Act 1999 (the SS Admin Act), the A New Tax
System (Family Assistance) Act 1999 (the FA Act), and the Veterans’
Entitlements Act 1986 (the VE Act) to:
- increase
maximum rates of Commonwealth Rent Assistance (CRA) by 10%
- increase
the JobSeeker Payment rate for recipients who have an assessed partial capacity
to work of 0–14 hours per week and
- provide
more flexibility for Carer Payment recipients to undertake work and study
without losing qualification for the payment.
The first 2 measures will have effect from 20 September
2024; the Carer Payment measure will have effect from 20 March 2025.
All 3 measures were included in the 2024–25
Budget (pp. 164, 166–167). The Carer Payment measure was announced
prior to the Budget on 4 May 2024.
Structure of the Bill and the
bills digest
The Bill contains 3 schedules, one for each of the
measures set out above. This bills digest will provide background information,
analysis and stakeholder comments for each of the schedules in separate
sections.
Financial
implications
According to the Explanatory
Memorandum, the CRA changes in Schedule 1 will cost $1.9 billion over the 5
years from 2023–24 (p. 1). The JobSeeker Payment changes in Schedule 2 will
cost $41.2 million and the Carer Payment changes in Schedule 3 will cost $18.6
million over the same 5‑year period (p. 1).
Committee consideration
At the time of writing, the Bill had not been referred to
or considered by any committees.
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.[1]
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights
At the time of writing, the Parliamentary Joint Committee
on Human Rights was yet to consider the Bill.
Policy position of non-government parties/independents
Coalition
In his second
reading speech on the Bill, Shadow Minister for Social Services Michael
Sukkar stated that the Coalition would support the Bill. The Shadow Minister
described the measures as ‘very minor proposals’ and ‘Pretty uncontroversial
stuff, but a bandaid on a bullet wound here of what is being felt by
Australians throughout this country’ (p. 2).
Independents
Independent
MP for North Sydney Kylea Tink welcomed the measures in the Bill but stated
that they will ‘fall well short’ of delivering solutions to the causes of
disadvantage and poverty. Ms Tink stated the proposed CRA increase would provide
additional nominal support but ‘the real rate of this payment will arguably not
make a dent in the rapidly increasing rental prices’ (p. 100).
Regarding the Bill as a whole, Ms Tink stated:
While most Australians are struggling through a
cost-of-living crisis right now, we must recognise that there is an ocean of
need. While this government is at least doing something, the truth is that the
something is the equivalent to stirring a teaspoon of sugar into it. (p. 99)
In her second reading speech, Independent
MP for Wentworth Allegra Spender stated:
… this bill moves the needle in the right direction and I
commend the government for listening to the advice of experts and delivering
help where it is most needed. I acknowledge the truth of the Treasurer's words
that he cannot provide money or funds for all the worthy projects that he and
others across this parliament are approached on. However, I think that in this
budget we should have seen greater support for those who most need it,
particularly in terms of the rate of JobSeeker, and we should have considered
other areas of spending restraints to enable that to happen … (p. 91)
Schedule 1—Increased support for Commonwealth Rent
Assistance recipients
Schedule 1 will amend the SS Act, the FA Act,
and the VE Act to increase the maximum rates of CRA by 10% from 20
September 2024. CRA
is a supplement paid to recipients of income support payments and some
Family Tax Benefit Part A recipients who rent privately.
The 2023–24 Budget also included a measure to increase the
maximum rate of CRA by 15%. This increase took effect on 20 September 2023. For
further information, see the Bills
Digest for the Social Services and Other Legislation Amendment
(Strengthening the Safety Net) Bill 2023 (pp. 18–22).
Background
Australia’s rental crisis
According to April
2024 CoreLogic figures, at $627 per week, national median advertised market
rents are at record high levels, having
averaged a growth rate of 9.1% a year for the past 3 calendar years. Rents
for existing leases, as
measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), rose 7.8% annually in the March
2024 quarter. This was the strongest rise since the March 2009 quarter.
Increasing rents reflect sustained low
national residential rental vacancy rates. These rates have remained just
over 1% since March 2022. A housing vacancy rate of around 3–4% is generally considered
to represent a point at which the market is evenly balanced between landlords
and renters (p. 61).
CoreLogic
attributes the unusually large rent rises post-COVID pandemic to several
factors, both immediate and longer-term.
More recent factors include a notable decline in the
average household size from late 2020; a rapid increase in the Australian
population from late-2022 as international border restrictions were lifted; and
an abrupt decline in investment housing activity between May 2022 and February 2023
in response to interest rate increases.
Longer term factors that have increased demand for private
rental properties and helped to increase rental costs include a reduction in
social housing supply; a declining rate of home ownership; and decreasing
average household sizes.
Commonwealth Rent Assistance
CRA is a
non-taxable income supplement paid through Centrelink to individuals and
families who rent in the private rental market. The supplement is intended to
assist individuals and families on low incomes in meeting their basic living
costs by reducing the proportion of their budget that must be spent on housing.
Qualifying criteria for
receipt of CRA
Recipients of a social security pension or allowance, an
eligible Department of Veterans’ Affairs (DVA) payment[2], or an amount over the base
rate of Family
Tax Benefit Part A, who are also paying private rent above minimum
thresholds, may be eligible for CRA.
CRA is not paid to homeowners or purchasers, people living
in public housing (but is paid to qualifying community housing residents), or
people living in residential aged care services with government-funded beds.
The minimum amount of rent to qualify for CRA is indexed
to the CPI twice yearly (on 20 March and 20 September).
CRA rates
Where rent is paid in excess of the threshold, the CRA
amount is calculated at a rate of 75 cents for every dollar of rent paid above
the specified threshold until the maximum rate of assistance payable is
reached. The maximum rate—which is also indexed to the CPI twice per
year—places a cap on the amount of CRA that can be paid.
The maximum rates and minimum rent thresholds vary
according to a person’s family situation and the number of dependent children
they have. For single people without children, the rent threshold and maximum
rate also vary according to whether they share their accommodation with others.
See Table 1 and Table 2
below for details of current rent thresholds and maximum rates, and the
proposed rate increases.
Effectiveness of CRA
In
March 2024 there were 1,295,005 income units receiving CRA with a social
security payment or Family Tax Benefit (an income unit comprises a single
person with or without dependent children or a couple with or without dependent
children). Most CRA recipients (71.9%) were paying enough rent to be eligible
for the maximum rate of assistance.
CRA is not designed to meet a specified benchmark for
ensuring housing affordability (in the same way that rent for social housing is
typically set at around 25% of a tenant’s assessable income), but rather to
improve housing affordability for income support recipients.
As
at June 2023, nationally, 43% of CRA recipients were in housing stress—that
is, they were paying more than 30% of their income on rent, after CRA. Without
the benefit of CRA, close to three-quarters (71%) of CRA recipients would have
been in housing stress. According
to the ABS, without the 15% increase in the maximum rates of CRA provided
at the 2023–24 Budget, rents would have increased
by 9.5% over the 12 months to the March 2024 quarter.
Problems with CRA
While the increase will provide additional relief to some
renters, it falls well short of the amount requested by several welfare
organisations and other stakeholders in the lead-up to the 2024–25 Budget.
Following the Budget, the Australian Council of Social
Service (ACOSS) expressed
its dissatisfaction with the size of the increase:
The modest Commonwealth Rent Assistance increase builds on
last year’s rise, giving a single person an extra $9.40 a week if they’re
receiving the maximum rate. Based on median rents, private renters receiving
JobSeeker or Youth Allowance will still be in deep housing stress because their
base rate of payment is so low. Even with the increase, they will be paying
half of their income in rent alone.
Several other issues have been identified in relation to
CRA, in addition to the rate at which it is paid. These include:
- the
maximum rate being indexed to the CPI rather than average rents paid by CRA
recipients, with increases in rents outstripping general inflation in many
areas of Australia and
- CRA
being only available to people in receipt of income support or an amount of
Family Tax Benefit over the base rate of Family Tax Benefit Part A, and not to other
people on low incomes who are renting privately.
For a brief discussion of these concerns, see page 20 of
the Bills
Digest for the Social Services and Other Legislation Amendment
(Strengthening the Safety Net) Bill 2023.
Calls for a review of CRA
For some time, housing and welfare experts have been
calling for changes
to be made to CRA arrangements and the Productivity Commission recently recommended
that the Government should: ‘review Commonwealth Rent Assistance as a priority.
There is a strong case for changes to improve its adequacy and targeting’ (p.
2).
Key
provisions
Items 7 and 8 of Schedule 1 replace
the CRA rate tables in the FA Act. Items 9–14 replace the CRA
rate tables in the SS Act. Items 17 and 18 replace the CRA
rate tables in the VE Act. Other amendments update the rent thresholds
set out in the legislation to the current rent thresholds.[3]
The rent thresholds set the minimum fortnightly rent required for a person to
qualify for CRA. CRA rates are calculated at 75 cents for each dollar of
fortnightly rent above the rent threshold, up to the maximum rate.
The current rent thresholds and maximum CRA rates compared
to the proposed increases are set out in Table 1
and Table 2. Table 1
sets out the CRA settings for those with dependent children who receive CRA
with Family Tax Benefit Part A. Table 2 sets out
the CRA settings for those without dependent children who receive CRA with
their income support payment.
The proposed rates will commence on 20 September 2024 but
indexation will also be applied to CRA on that date (in line with CPI movements
between December 2023 and June 2024).[4]
This means that the actual maximum rates from 20 September 2024 onwards will be
higher than those shown in the tables.
Table 1 CRA for recipients with children – paid
with Family Tax Benefit Part A
|
Current |
Proposed |
Circumstances |
Rent threshold
(fortnightly rent must be higher than the threshold to receive CRA) |
Maximum CRA if
fortnightly rent higher than |
Maximum CRA payment per
fortnight |
Maximum CRA payment
per fortnight |
Single, 1 or 2 dependent
children |
$191.80 |
$486.74 |
$221.20 |
$243.32 |
Single, 3 or more dependent
children |
$191.80 |
$525.00 |
$249.90 |
$274.96 |
Couple, 1 or 2 dependent
children |
$283.50 |
$578.44 |
$221.20 |
$243.32 |
Couple, 3 or more dependent
children |
$283.50 |
$616.70 |
$249.90 |
$274.96 |
Sources: Services Australia (SA), A
guide to Australian Government payments: 20 March 2024–30 June 2024,
(Canberra: SA, 2024), 38; Parliamentary Library estimates based on Schedule 1
of the Social
Services and Other Legislation Amendment (More Support in the Safety Net) Bill
2024.
Table 2 CRA
for recipients without children – paid with income support
|
Current |
Proposed |
Circumstances |
Rent threshold (fortnightly rent must be higher than
the threshold to receive CRA) |
Maximum CRA if fortnightly rent higher than |
Maximum CRA payment per fortnight |
Maximum CRA payment per fortnight |
Single |
$146.00 |
$396.94 |
$188.20 |
$207.00 |
Single, sharer |
$146.00 |
$313.29 |
$125.47 |
$138.00 |
Couple |
$236.60 |
$472.87 |
$177.20 |
$195.00 |
Member of a couple separated by illness, respite care or
imprisonment |
$146.00 |
$396.94 |
$188.20 |
$207.00 |
Member of a couple temporarily separated |
$146.00 |
$382.27 |
$177.20 |
$195.00 |
Sources: Services Australia (SA), A
guide to Australian Government payments: 20 March 2024–30 June 2024,
(Canberra: SA, 2024), 38; Schedule 1 of the Social
Services and Other Legislation Amendment (More Support in the Safety Net) Bill
2024; subsection 1070L(2), Social
Security Act 1991.
Schedule 2—Increasing JobSeeker payments for certain
recipients who have a partial capacity to work
Schedule 2 of the Bill will amend the SS Act to
increase the rate of JobSeeker Payment paid to single recipients who have an
assessed partial
capacity to work of 0–14 hours per week. The higher rate will be the same
as the JobSeeker
Payment rate currently paid to single principal carers of dependent
children and singles aged 55 or over who have been in receipt of income support
for 9 continuous months or more.
Currently, single JobSeeker Payment recipients with an
assessed partial capacity to work can receive a maximum of $778.30 per
fortnight (including the base rate, energy supplement and pharmaceutical
allowance). The higher rate (paid to single parents and singles aged 55+) is
currently $833.20 per fortnight (including the base rate, energy supplement and
pharmaceutical allowance).
The Government
estimates around 4,700 individuals will benefit from this measure.
Background
Partial capacity to work
A partial capacity to work for the purposes of social
security payments (including JobSeeker Payment, Youth Allowance (Other),
Parenting Payment and Special Benefit) is defined at section 16B of the SS
Act. A person has a partial capacity to work if:
- the
person has a physical, intellectual or psychiatric impairment and
- the
Secretary [of the Department of Social Services] is satisfied that:
- the
impairment of itself prevents the person from doing 30 hours per week of work
independently of a program of support within the next 2 years and
- no
training activity is likely (because of the impairment) to enable the person to
do 30 hours per week of work independently of a program of support within the
next 2 years.
‘30 hours per week of work’ is defined as 30 hours per
week on wages at or above the relevant minimum wage (subsection 16B(5)).
A program of support (as defined at section 16B) is a
program designed to help people prepare for, find or maintain work which is
funded wholly or partly by the Commonwealth. These
programs are usually offered by Workforce Australia providers or Disability
Employment Services.
Introduction of the partial capacity to work category
The 2006 Welfare to Work changes to Disability Support
Pension (DSP) saw the introduction
of the partial capacity to work arrangements for Newstart Allowance (which
was merged with Sickness Allowance and Bereavement Allowance to form JobSeeker
Payment in March 2020). DSP has 2 main
qualification criteria:
- an impairment
criterion and
- a continuing
inability to work criterion.
To meet the impairment requirement, a person must be
permanently blind or have a permanent physical, intellectual or psychiatric
condition resulting in a functional impairment of at least 20 points on the impairment
tables. If an individual is not participating in the supported wage
system, they must also have an assessed continuing inability to work. This
means that, because of their impairment, an individual is unable to do any work
of at least 15 hours per week independently of a program of support
in the next 2 years or be reskilled for such work within the next 2 years.
Prior to the 2006 changes, the DSP continuing inability to
work criterion was that an individual be unable to do any work of at least 30
hours per week. The 2006 changes also brought in the program of support
element.
The creation
of the new partial capacity to work criterion was to allow those who might
previously have qualified for DSP to receive the unemployment benefit but with reduced
mutual obligation requirements (p. 7).
How is a partial capacity to work assessed?
A partial capacity to work is generally established by an
Employment Services Assessment or a Job Capacity Assessment.
An Employment
Services Assessment (ESA) examines an individual’s barriers to finding and
maintaining employment, work capacity, and interventions/assistance that may be
of benefit to the individual to improve their work capacity. The assessors are
health and allied health professionals employed by Services Australia. An
individual may
be referred for an ESA if:
- they
are in receipt of income support payments and applying for an exemption from
mutual obligation requirements
- other
income support recipients who are eligible to volunteer
- they
register directly with an employment services provider
- they
inform Services Australia or their employment services provider of a
significant change in their circumstances that affects their work capacity
and/or employment assistance needs
- the JSCI
[Job Seeker Classification Instrument] administered by Services Australia or an
employment services provider, indicates they have barriers to work that require
further assessment, and/or
- they
are a DSP recipient under age 35 with potential participation
requirements who does not already have a current work capacity assessment. The
assessment will establish work capacity bandwidths of 0–7 or 8+ hours per week
and will not affect the recipient's eligibility for DSP.
Job Capacity
Assessments (JCAs) are generally carried out as part of claim for
Disability Support Pension. The assessors are medical, health and allied health
professionals employed by Services Australia. JCAs assess an individual’s level
of functional impairment and work capacity (current and future).
According to the Department of Social Services’ Social
security guide, ESAs and JCAs assess work capacity in bandwidths
of 0–7 hours per week, 8–14 hours per week, 15–22 hours per week, 23–29 hours
per week or 30 hours per week.
Medical
evidence is also required to establish the impairment criterion – this
evidence needs to include a diagnosis by a medical practitioner of a condition
that gives rise to the impairment and information on the functional impairment.
Mutual obligation requirements for people assessed as
having a partial capacity to work
Being assessed as having a partial capacity to work
affects an individual’s mutual obligation
requirements. These requirements are assessed on the basis of the job
seeker’s future capacity, with intervention. A job seeker is not expected to
participate at this future capacity immediately but is expected to gradually
increase their participation with the assistance of employment services.
According to the Social
security guide, job seekers with a partial capacity to work in the 0–7
or 8–14 hours a week bandwidths can meet their mutual obligation requirements by
attending a quarterly interview with Services Australia. The job seeker can
volunteer to accept a referral to a program of assistance but cannot be
penalised for not accepting.
JobSeeker Payment recipients with a partial capacity to
work of 15–29 hours a week can meet their mutual obligation requirements by
doing 15
hours per week of paid work (including self-employment) or approved study
(or a combination). If not meeting their requirements through work or
study, they will need to be connected to an employment services program and
looking for work of 15–29 hours a week (that matches their capacity). They can
also meet their requirements by participating in a program of assistance
recommended by their ESA/JCA.
The proportion of JobSeeker Payment recipients with a
partial capacity to work has been growing
The number and proportion of unemployment benefit
recipients with a partial capacity to work has been steadily increasing. In
2007, less than 10% of Newstart recipients had a partial capacity to work
(p. 9). As at May
2024, 43% (349,995) of the 818,250 JobSeeker Payment recipients had a
partial capacity to work of less than 30 hours a week.
Figure 1 is drawn from Department of Social Services data
and shows the number of Newstart Allowance and JobSeeker Payment recipients by
assessed capacity to work since January 2012. The significant increase in
JobSeeker Payment recipients following the COVID-19 restrictions has since
declined and the proportion of recipients with a partial capacity to work has
been above 40% since March 2022.
Figure 1: Newstart Allowance/JobSeeker Payment
recipients by assessed capacity to work, January 2012 to May 2024
Source: Department of Social Services (DSS), DSS Income Support Recipients – Monthly Time Series
April 2024; DSS, Expanded DSS JobSeeker Payment and Youth Allowance
Recipients - monthly profile - May 2024.
Those with
a partial capacity to work stay on income support for longer
Data
published as part of the Department of Social Services’ Australian Priority
Investment Approach to Welfare 2022 report found that those aged 22–30 on
JobSeeker Payment who had a partial capacity to work were expected to spend, on
average, 29% longer on income support over the next 5 years than those with a
full capacity to work. Older recipients with a partial capacity to work were
also projected to spend longer on income support compared to those with a full
capacity – 4.2 out of the next 5 years for those aged 55–64 with a partial
capacity to work compared to 3.8 out of the next 5 years for those aged 55–64
with a full capacity.
The analysis
also found that those with a partial capacity to work and who lived in a
low socio-economic index area or who were First Nations were projected to spend
more time on income support than other JobSeeker Payment recipients with a
partial capacity to work.
A small number of JobSeeker recipients with a disability
will benefit
As noted above, the government estimates that around 4,700
people will benefit from the increased rate for single JobSeeker Payment
recipients with an assessed partial capacity to work of 0–14 hours per week.
This represents around 1.3% of JobSeeker Payment recipients with a partial
capacity to work of less than 30 hours a week.
Department of Social Services officials told
a Senate Estimates hearing on 4 June 2024 that there were around 9,800
JobSeeker Payment recipients with a capacity to work of 0–14 hours per week (p. 43).
Some of those with a capacity to work of 0–14 hours a week will already be in
receipt of the higher rate as they are single parents or aged 55 or over and in
receipt of income support for 9 continuous months or more.
The small number of JobSeeker Payment recipients with an
assessed capacity to work of under 15 hours a week reflects the fact that
most income support claimants with an impairment resulting in a work capacity
of 0–14 hours a week would be seeking DSP rather than JobSeeker Payment. People
receiving JobSeeker Payment with an assessed partial capacity to work of less
than 15 hours per week represent people with disability who could meet the DSP
Continuing Inability to Work criterion but not one of the other DSP
qualification criteria – most likely the impairment requirements but possibly
the residence criteria. The Australian
priority investment approach to welfare 2022 report found that 35% of
new DSP recipients in 2022 were on JobSeeker Payment with a partial capacity to
work in 2021 (p. 34).
The increased
JobSeeker Payment rate for this small group is $283.10 per fortnight lower
than the maximum rate for DSP (including all typically-paid supplements) (pp.
15, 22).
In a 2020 paper, the Parliamentary
Budget Office found that the 2006 DSP changes, together with further
changes to eligibility criteria in 2012 and 2015, led to a significant decline
in the share of new applicants granted access to DSP (p. 12). These changes
will have shifted more people with impairments affecting work capacity onto the
lower rate JobSeeker Payment and other payments such as Youth Allowance (Other)
and Parenting Payment. A 2021
paper from the Brotherhood of St Laurence found evidence of a similar
decline in successful DSP claimants correlated with an increase in JobSeeker
recipients with a partial capacity to work (pp. 15–17).
Those receiving Youth Allowance (Other), Parenting Payment
or Special Benefit with a partial capacity to work of less than 15 hours a week
will not be eligible for a higher rate (these payments do not have a rate
category equivalent to the JobSeeker Payment rate for long term recipients aged
55+).
Stakeholder response
In a post-Budget
media release, ACOSS noted that the measure would benefit 4,700 people: ‘not
even half a percent of the more than one million people receiving JobSeeker and
related payments unable to afford food. People on the lowest incomes expected
and deserved much more in this Budget’ (p. 2).
Key
provisions
Item 4 of Schedule 2 replaces the table at existing
point 1068-B1 of the SS Act, which sets out the maximum basic rates of
JobSeeker Payment. The new table includes a new payment category (item 6
of the table) which is a single JobSeeker Payment recipient to whom proposed
point 1068-B1AA applies. Proposed point 1068-B1AA is inserted by item
5. It applies to a person if:
- they
are receiving JobSeeker Payment
- they
have a partial capacity to work because of an impairment and
- the
Secretary is satisfied:
- the
impairment of itself prevents the person from doing 15 hours per week of work
independently of a program of support within the next 2 years and
- no
training activity is likely (because of the impairment) to enable the person to
do 15 hours per week of work independently of a program of support within the
next 2 years.
The proposed criteria are similar to the existing partial
capacity to work criteria at section 16B, except for the fewer hours of work
capacity (less than 15 hours per week rather than less than 30 hours per week).
A person who meets the criteria at proposed point
1068-B1AA will receive a maximum basic rate equivalent to single parents
and those aged 55 and above who have been in receipt of income support for 9
continuous months.
Schedule 3—Providing flexibility to carers
Schedule 3 amends the SS Act and the SS Admin
Act to provide greater flexibility to Carer Payment
recipients undertaking work and study so that they do not lose eligibility for
the payment when they temporarily cease providing care to the care-recipient.
The proposed changes will take effect from 20 March 2025 (Schedule 3, item
12).
Background
Carer Payment is
an income support payment for those providing constant care to someone with a
disability or medical condition, or an adult who is frail aged. The Carer
Payment rate is the same as that for the Age Pension and DSP, and the same
pension income and assets tests apply.
To qualify
for Carer Payment, an individual must be providing ‘constant care’ to
someone who needs care for at least 6 months or caring for someone at the end
of their life. Constant care
means for a ‘significant period’ each day, at least the equivalent of a normal
working day in personal care, which prevents the carer from working full-time.
Carers can
remain qualified for Carer Payment during temporary periods where they
cease to provide constant care for up to 63 days in a calendar year (or another
limited number of days as determined by the Secretary of the Department of
Social Services in a particular case).
A separate rule
allows carers to undertake up to 25 hours a week of employment, volunteer work,
training or study (including travel time and meal breaks) without it affecting
their qualification for the payment. Where time in employment, volunteer work,
training or study exceeds 25 hours in a week, the carer can use 7 days of their
63 cessation of care days to remain
qualified for Carer Payment. Income from work may affect the carer’s
payment rate under the income test.
As at
April 2024, there were 308,410 recipients of Carer Payment. Around 10%
(30,950) had earnings from employment.
Key changes
and provisions
Items 2–7 of Schedule 3 will amend subsections
198AC(4)–(5) of the SS Act so that the 25-hour rule only applies to
paid work and will change the limit from 25 hours per week to a total of 100
hours over a 4-week period. This provides more flexibility to those with
varying work patterns (for example a week with 30 hours of paid work followed
by a week with 10 hours of paid work).
Time spent in training, study or voluntary work will no
longer count towards the 100 hours over 4 weeks rule. This appears to
remove the limit on time spent on these specific activities. However, the Explanatory
Memorandum states
that ‘a day spent undertaking such activities may be counted towards the
carer’s temporary cessation of care days’ (p. 12). The proposed change would mean
time spent on training, study or voluntary work would count as a cessation of
care, where the time spent on these activities means they do not meet the
definition of constant care. There would no longer be a special allowance for a
set number of hours to be spent in these unpaid activities before Carer payment
qualification could be affected.
Minister
for Social Services Amanda Rishworth stated that travel time will no longer
count towards the 100 hours over a 4 week period rule–this would involve a
policy rather than legislative change.
Item 1 of Schedule 3 will add proposed subsection
198AC(3C) to the SS Act to allow those who exceed their 63-day
cessation of care period to resume providing constant care in the same calendar
year and remain qualified for Carer Payment. However, the carer will not
qualify for Carer Payment on any further days in that calendar year not
providing constant care.
Item 11 adds proposed section 95CA to the SS
Admin Act so that an individual’s Carer Payment will be suspended, rather
than cancelled, in specific circumstances. Where a payment is only suspended,
the recipient does not need to make a new claim to resume payment. The
suspension period will be for up to 26 weeks. The circumstances are:
- the
carer temporarily ceases to provide care because of an event or change of
circumstances that means the 63-day limit is exceeded
- the
carer’s payment rate is reduced to nil under the income test because of an
event or change of circumstances.
To be eligible for a suspension rather than cancellation,
the carer will need to notify Services Australia of the relevant event or
change of circumstances and meet other conditions.
Item 8 adds proposed section 1061ZCB to the SS
Act so that carers remain eligible for the Pensioner Concession Card during
the period their payment is suspended.
Stakeholder response
Carers
Australia welcomed the proposed changes:
Carers Australia, the national peak body representing 2.65
million unpaid carers, has been calling for a review of the 25-hour rule for
over 10 years.
Carers have repeatedly stated the rules around the Carer
Payment have contributed to ongoing disadvantage. The Albanese Labor
Government’s announcement to relax the rules and allow more flexibility in the
hours that carers work, study or volunteer over a four-week period, is a
significant step towards mitigating the disadvantage.