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Social Security Legislation Amendment
(Stronger Penalties for Serious Failures) Bill 2014
Portfolio:
Employment
Introduced: House of
Representatives 4 June 2014
Purpose
1.1
The Social Security Legislation Amendment (Stronger Penalties for
Serious Failures) Bill 2014 (the bill) seeks to amend the Social Security
(Administration) Act 1999 to provide that:
-
jobseekers who incur an eight-week non-payment penalty for
refusing suitable work will no longer be able to have the penalty waived; and
-
jobseekers who persistently fail to comply with participation
obligations will only be able to have the penalty waived once while in receipt
of an activity tested income support payment.
Committee view on compatibility
Right to social security
1.2
The right to social security is guaranteed by article 9 of the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR). This
right recognises the importance of adequate social benefits in reducing the
effects of poverty and plays an important role in realising many other economic,
social and cultural rights, particularly the right to an adequate standard of
living and the right to health.
1.3
Access to social security is required when a person has no other income
and has insufficient means to support themselves and their dependents.
Enjoyment of the right requires that sustainable social support schemes are:
-
available to people in need;
-
adequate to support an adequate standard of living and health
care;
-
accessible (providing universal coverage without discrimination
and qualifying and withdrawal conditions that are lawful, reasonable,
proportionate and transparent); and
-
affordable (where contributions are required).
1.4
Under article 2(1) of ICESCR, Australia has certain obligations in
relation to the right to social security. These include:
-
the immediate obligation to satisfy certain minimum aspects of
the right;
-
the obligation not to unjustifiably take any backwards steps that
might affect the right;
-
the obligation to ensure the right is made available in a
non-discriminatory way; and
-
the obligation to take reasonable measures within its available
resources to progressively secure broader enjoyment of the right.
1.5
Specific purposes and circumstances recognised as engaging a person's
right to social security include health care and sickness; old age;
unemployment and workplace injury; family and child support; paid maternity
leave; and disability support.
1.6
Under article 4 of the ICESCR, economic, social and cultural rights may
be subject only to such limitations as are determined by law and compatible
with the nature of those rights, and solely for the purpose of promoting the
general welfare in a democratic society. Such limitations must be proportionate
to the achievement of a legitimate objective, and must be the least restrictive
alternative where several types of limitations are available.
Right to an adequate standard of
living
1.7
The right to an adequate standard is guaranteed by article 11(1) of the
ICESCR, and requires States parties to take steps to ensure the availability,
adequacy and accessibility of food, clothing, water and housing for all people
in Australia.
1.8
The obligations of article 2(1) of the ICESCR also apply in relation to
the right to an adequate standard of living, as described above in relation to
the right to social security.
Removal or limitation of the
ability to waive the non-payment penalty for refusal of suitable work, or for
persistent non-compliance
1.9
Currently, the Social Security (Administration) Act 1999 provides
that jobseekers who receive an activity-tested income support payment
‘participation payment’ (that is, the Newstart allowance and, in some cases,
youth allowance, parenting payment or special benefit) may have an eight-week
non-payment penalty imposed if they refuse suitable employment, or for repeated
failures to comply with their activity-test obligations.
1.10
The bill would remove the ability for the eight-week non-payment penalty
to be waived for refusing suitable employment. In relation to jobseekers who
persistently fail to comply with participation obligations, the penalty will
only be able to be waived once for each period of continuous receipt of a
participation payment.
1.11
The committee notes that the measures may limit these rights because
their effect may be to reduce the ability of jobseekers subject to the
eight-week penalty to enjoy an adequate standard of living. In this regard, the
statement of compatibility notes that the measures potentially limit the rights
to social security and to an adequate standard of living, and concludes:
To the extent that the Bill may limit the right to social
security and the right to an adequate standard of living, there is a reasonable
justification...[1]
1.12
The statement of compatibility effectively identifies the 'reasonable
justification' or objective of the measures as being to 'provide stronger
deterrents to persistent non-compliance' of jobseekers to satisfy participation
requirements.[2]
1.13
However, the committee notes that, while the statement of compatibility
provides data regarding the number and amount of penalties applied, and the
percentage of cases in which a waiver has been applied, the assessment does not
establish that the removal or limitation of the waiver will, of itself, provide
a deterrent against non-compliance with jobseekers' obligations.[3]
In particular, the figures provided on the proportion of waivers granted are
not accompanied by an analysis to show that these were inappropriate, excessive
or misused. It is therefore unclear how limiting the availability of a waiver
on the ground of a jobseeker’s severe financial hardship, or because a
jobseeker agrees to undertake more intensive activities, such as Work for the
Dole, would achieve the stated objective of the measures.
1.14
Based on the information and analysis provided the committee does not
consider that the statement of compatibility adequately demonstrates that the
proposed amendments are needed for the purpose of meeting a pressing and
substantial concern, that there is a rational connection between the measure
and the identified objective and that the measure is a reasonable and
proportionate one for the achievement of that objective.
1.15
The committee notes that to demonstrate that a limitation is
permissible, proponents of legislation must provide reasoned and evidence-based
explanations of why the measures are necessary in pursuit of a legitimate
objective. The Attorney-General's Department's guidance on the preparation of
statements of compatibility states that the 'existence of a legitimate
objective must be identified clearly with supporting reasons and, generally,
empirical data to demonstrate that [it is] important'.[4]
To be capable of justifying a proposed limitation of human rights, a legitimate
objective must address a pressing or substantial concern, and not simply seek
an outcome regarded as desirable or convenient.
1.16
Further, the committee considers that the characterisation of the bill
as promoting the right to work by providing 'a stronger incentive to accept an
offer of suitable work'[5],
is not an accurate assessment of the limitation on human rights proposed by the
measure. For example, the statement does not adequately the address the
punitive aspects of the bill and how these might outweigh the asserted indirect
promotion of the right to work. Reference to more remote impacts on other human
rights, fails to effectively analyse the human rights implications required by
human rights law.
1.17
The committee therefore seeks the advice of the Assistant
Minister for Employment as to whether the removal or limitation of the ability
to have the non-payment penalty waived is compatible with the right to social
security, and particularly:
-
whether the proposed changes are aimed at achieving a
legitimate objective;
-
whether there is a rational connection between the limitation
and that objective; and
-
whether the limitation is reasonable and proportionate measure
for the achievement of that objective.
Right to equality and
non-discrimination
1.18
The rights to equality and non-discrimination are guaranteed by articles
2, 16 and 26 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
(ICCPR).These are fundamental human rights that are essential to the protection
and respect of all human rights. They provide that everyone is entitled to
enjoy their rights without discrimination of any kind, and that all people are
equal before the law and entitled without discrimination to the equal and
non-discriminatory protection of the law.
1.19
For human rights purposes 'discrimination' is impermissible differential
treatment among persons or groups that results in a person or a group being
treated less favourably than others, based on one of the prohibited grounds for
discrimination.[6]
1.20
Discrimination may be either direct or indirect. Indirect discrimination
may occur when a requirement or condition is neutral on its face but has a
disproportionate or unintended negative impact on particular groups. Articles
2, 3, 4 and 15 of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) further describes the content of these
rights, describing the specific elements that States parties are required to
take into account to ensure the rights to equality for women.
Removal or limitation of the
ability to waive the non-payment penalty for refusal of suitable work, or for
persistent non-compliance
1.21
The committee considers that the bill could potentially have a
disproportionate or unintended negative impact on particular groups, and may
therefore engage and limit the rights to equality and non-discrimination. For
example, women are generally more likely to be welfare recipients and to have a
range of caring responsibilities that intersect with the right to social
security.
1.22
However, the statement of compatibility does not provide any assessment
of the compatibility of the bill with the rights to equality and non-discrimination.
1.23
The committee's usual expectation where a limitation on a right is
proposed is that the statement of compatibility provides an assessment of
whether the limitation is reasonable, necessary, and proportionate to achieving
a legitimate objective.
1.24
The committee notes that group-specific information, such as analysis or
modelling based on gender-disaggregated data, is particularly relevant to the
human rights assessment of this measure.
1.25
The committee therefore seeks the advice of the Assistant Minister
for Employment as to whether the removal or limitation of the ability to have
the non-payment penalty waived is compatible with the rights to equality and
non-discrimination.
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