Background
Referral
1.1
On 15 September 2016, the Senate referred an inquiry into the Family
Assistance Legislation Amendment (Jobs for Families Child Care Package) Bill
2016 [Provisions] (Jobs for Families bill), and the Social Services Legislation
Amendment (Family Payments Structural Reform and Participation Measures) Bill
2016 [Provisions] (Social Services bill) to the Education and Employment
Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 10 October 2016.
Conduct of the inquiry
1.2
Details of the inquiry were made available on the committee's website.
The committee also contacted a number of organisations inviting submissions to
the inquiry. Submissions were received from 50 individuals and organisations,
as detailed in Appendix 1.
1.3
Public hearings were held in Melbourne on 3 and 4 October 2016. A list
of witnesses can be found in Appendix 2.
Background
1.4
The bills seek to reform family assistance for child care by introducing
the Child Care Subsidy, and an Additional Child Care Subsidy, and increase the
rate of the Family Tax Benefit Part A payments and introduce a new rate
structure for Family Tax Benefit Part B.
1.5
Introduced by the Hon Christian Porter MP, Minister for Social Services,
the two bills seek to reintroduce major reforms under the Australian
Government's Jobs for Families Child Care Package.
1.6
The Jobs for Families bill seeks to amend various Acts in relation to
family assistance for child care. Its key measures are:
-
the introduction of the Child Care Subsidy, replacing two current
payments: the Child Care Benefit and Child Care Rebate;
-
the introduction of an Additional Child Care Subsidy, available
under certain circumstances and at various rates; and
-
new approved provider and service requirements, to come into
effect from July 2018.
1.7
The Social Services bill seeks to reform Family Tax Benefit Part A (FTB
A) and at-home under-18 year old youth fortnightly rates. Its key measures are:
-
to increase the fortnightly rates of FTB A by $10.08 for each FTB
child in the family up to the age of 19 years, with an equivalent fortnightly
rate increase of around $7.48 for certain youth allowance and disability
support pension recipients under the age of 18; and
-
introduce a new rate structure for FTB B, and make other
amendments to the rules for FTB B by:
-
increasing the standard rate by $1 000.10 per year for families
whose youngest child is under one year of age;
-
maintaining the current standard rates for families with a
youngest child aged between one and under five, and between five and under 13
years of age;
-
maintaining the current standard rate for single parents who are
at least 60 years of age, grandparents and great-grandparents with a youngest
child aged between 13 and 18;
-
introducing a reduced standard rate of $1 000.10 per year for
individuals whose youngest child is aged 13 to 16 (currently $2 832.40), and
who who are not single parents aged 60 or more or grandparents or
great-grandparents; and
-
remove entitlement to FTB Part B for single parent families who
are not single parents aged 60 or more or grandparents or great-grandparents,
from 1 January of the calendar year their youngest child turns 17.[1]
Previous consideration of the bills
1.8
Both bills were introduced into the 44th Parliament, and were
each the subject of inquiries by Senate committees. Owing to the dissolution of
the parliament, the bills lapsed and were reintroduced into the 45th
Parliament by the Hon Christian Porter MP, on 1 September 2016.
Jobs for Families bill
1.9
The Senate Education and Employment Legislation Committee (Education and
Employment Committee) has previously inquired into an earlier version of the
Jobs for Families bill, and tabled its report on 4 April 2016.[2]
1.10
The Education and Employment Committee noted that the simplified system
to be introduced by the Child Care Subsidy had 'attracted praise from most
submitters'.[3]
1.11
However, the Education and Employment Committee also noted that 'other
elements of the bill drew criticism and concerns from many submitters',
including the activity test provision.[4]
1.12
The Education and Employment Committee concluded that the emphasis of
the bill is to provide a greater subsidy rate to families earning the least and
more hours of subsidy to families who work the most:
This approach, the committee believes, is in line with
community expectations, whereby subsidies and assistance are targeted at those
whom they will most benefit and reducing the subsidisation of those with the
means to pay a greater proportion of the costs themselves.[5]
1.13
The Education and Employment Committee conducted a public hearing in
March 2016, and heard from representatives of Early Childhood Australia, The
Parenthood, Secretariat of National Aboriginal and Islander Child Care and the
Department of Education and Training.
1.14
The committee recommended that the Senate pass the bill.
Social Services bill
1.15
The Senate Community Affairs Legislation Committee (Community Affairs
committee) has previously inquired into an earlier version of the Social
Services bill, and tabled its report on 1 March 2016.[6]
1.16
In its report, the Community Affairs Committee noted that:
Most submitters and witnesses supported reforms to the FTB
payments system to ensure it is simpler, fairer and better targeted, and
supported the rate increases for certain cohorts. However, submitters and
witnesses generally opposed the proposed reduced payment rate for certain
families and expressed concerns about the following issues:
Impacts on low income families and vulnerable families, such
as single parents and families of children with disability;
The costs of raising children increase with children's age,
while the measures propose a corresponding reduction in payments.
The proposed increases do not compensate for the loss of
supplements.
The proposed amendments do not appropriately encourage
greater workforce participation.
IT and payroll system upgrades may not address end of year
FTB debts.[7]
1.17
The Community Affairs Committee conducted a public hearing in February
2016, and heard from the Australian Council of Social Service, The Parenthood,
UnitingCare Australia, National Council of Single Mothers and their Children,
Australian Catholic Council for Employment Relations, Catholic Social Services
Australia, CatholicCare Melbourne & Gippsland, National Welfare Rights
Network, Grandparents Australia, National Council of Women of Australia,
Children with Disability Australia and the Department of Social Services.
1.18
The committee recommended that the Senate pass the bills.
Scrutiny of Bills Committee
1.19
The Senate Committee on the Scrutiny of Bills (Scrutiny of Bills
Committee) drew attention to certain provisions of the Jobs for Families bill
2015, including:
-
review rights;
-
delegation of legislative power—Henry VIII clause; and
-
trespass on personal rights and liberties—strict liability;
1.20
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee sought responses from Senator the Hon
Simon Birmingham, Minister for Education and Training, and published those
responses in its Fifth Report of 2016.[8]
Changes in the 2016 bills
Jobs for Families bill
1.21
Changes to the Jobs for Families bill relate to the dates of commencement
of particular schedules, taking into account the prorogation and subsequent
re-introduction of the bill. The Department of Education and Training set out
the changes in their submission. The majority of the changes relate to
correcting 'drafting errors and to give effect to policy intent', including:
-
a new rule making power that will enable the Minister to
determine circumstances in which children over the age of 13 and/or are
attending secondary school may be eligible for the child care subsidy;
-
the removal of potential unintended consequences in relation to
the way that services calculate attendances when issuing a certificate in
relation to a child;
-
the expansion of the Secretary’s power to make case by case
decisions about an individual’s Activity Test Result; and
-
correction of an omission from the 2015 iteration of the bill
that would have left the Secretary's decisions in relation to grant funding
open to review.
Social Services bill
1.22
Changes to the Social Services bill relate to the commencement date for
Schedule 2 of the bill, which has been changed from 1 July 2016 to 1 July 2017.
Human rights implications
1.23
The Explanatory Memorandum asserts that the Jobs for Families bill is
compatible with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared in the
international instruments listed in section 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011.[9]
1.24
In relation to Human Rights obligations, the Explanatory Memorandum for
the Jobs for Families bill notes:
The current system is complex and difficult for families to
navigate. It is inflexible and does not effectively meet families’ workforce
participation needs. Measures in the Bill are compatible with and advance human
rights under the ICCPR, the CEDAW, the CRC and the ICESCR which will ultimately
enable parents who wish to work, or to work more, by providing a simpler, more
affordable, more flexible and more accessible child care system. As described
above, to the extent that the proposed Bill may limit some rights, those
limitations are reasonable, necessary and proportionate.[10]
1.25
The Explanatory Memorandum asserts that the Social Services bill is
compatible with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared in the
international instruments listed in section 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011.[11]
Financial impact
1.26
The measures in the Jobs for Families bill form part of the Government’s
investment of approximately $40 billion in child care support over the forward
estimates. This includes more than $3 billion of additional expenditure to
support the implementation of the Jobs for Families Child Care Package.[12]
Jobs for Families
legislative measure
|
Funding
|
Years
|
Child Care Subsidy
|
$23.2 billion
|
Over two years from 2018-19
|
Additional Child Care Subsidy
|
$173 million
|
Over two years from 2018-19
|
Family Assistance Legislation
Amendment (Jobs For Families Child Care Package) Bill 2016, Explanatory
Memorandum.
1.27
The measures in the Social Services bill seek to provide savings in
order to fund the Jobs for Families Child Care Package.[13]
Measure
|
Financial impact over
the forward estimates (fiscal balance, whole of government)
|
Reform Family Tax Benefit Part
A and at-home under-18 year old youth fortnightly rates
|
Cost of $1 166.7 million
|
Reforms to Family Tax
Benefit Part B
|
Saving of $787.9 million
|
Phase out the Family Tax
Benefit Part A and Part B supplements
|
Saving of $6 253.2 million
|
Social Services Legislation
Amendment (Family Payments Structural Reform and Participation Measures) Bill
2016, Explanatory Memorandum.
Acknowledgement
1.28
The Committee thanks those individuals and organisations who contributed
to the inquiry by preparing written submissions or by appearing at the public
hearing.
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