Introductory Info
Date introduced: 6 February 2020
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Social Services
Commencement: If Royal Assent occurs before 15 May 2020, the Act commences on 1 July 2020. If Royal Assent occurs on or after 15 May 2020, then the Act commences on the first day of the first calendar month that occurs two months after the day of Royal Assent.
The Bills Digest at a glance
The Social Services and Other
Legislation Amendment (Simplifying Income Reporting and Other Measures) Bill
2020 (the Bill) will amend the Social Security Act 1991, the Social
Security (Administration) Act 1999, the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986,
the A New Tax System (Family Assistance) (Administration) Act 1999 and
the Student Assistance Act 1973 to:
- change
the way employment income is assessed for the purposes of the social security
income test so that rather than assessing income ‘earned, derived or received’
during the assessment period, the income test will assess employment income
that is paid during the assessment period and
- allow
for data collected by the Australian Tax Office, particularly employment income
reported through the Single Touch Payroll (STP) system, to be shared with
Services Australia for the purposes of administering social security, family
assistance and student payments.
The changes were announced in the 2019–20 Budget and are
expected to provide savings of $2.1 billion over five years from 2018–19.
The savings will be derived from reduced overpayments arising from inaccurate
income reporting. The Government intends for the measures to commence on
1 July 2020.
The new income reporting method is a very significant
change to how income support payments are administered and to longstanding
reporting requirements imposed on payment recipients. Around 550,000 people
report income to Services Australia in any given fortnight. Key to the success
of the measure will be the resources invested in implementation—particularly in
communicating the changes to payment recipients and developing the systems used
to report income. The proposed changes should make it much easier for many
recipients to report their employment income using information available on
their payslips.
It is intended that in 2020–21, some employment income
information will be prefilled by linking to the Single Touch Payroll data.
However, payment recipients will still be obligated to report their income and
to verify any prefilled data. The use of Single Touch Payroll data to prefill
income reporting fields for social security recipients has not been trialled.
Stakeholder groups are broadly supportive of the proposed
change to income reporting but have concerns with how the system will be
implemented. Many of the groups have recommended thorough testing of the new
reporting systems prior to commencement.
Victoria Legal Aid raised concerns with provisions in the
Bill relating to the ‘employment period’ income needs to be reported as arising
from—the Bill and explanatory materials do not provide clear guidance as to how
this period is to be defined.
There is also a lack of clarity over why family assistance
payments (such as Family Tax Benefit and Child Care Subsidy) are included under
the provisions relating to information sharing.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Social Services and Other Legislation
Amendment (Simplifying Income Reporting and Other Measures) Bill 2020 (the
Bill) is to amend the Social Security Act
1991 (the SS Act), the Social Security
(Administration) Act 1999 (the SS Admin Act), the Veterans’
Entitlements Act 1986, the A New Tax System
(Family Assistance) (Administration) Act 1999 (the FA Admin Act)
and the Student
Assistance Act 1973 to:
- change
the way employment income is assessed for the purposes of the social security
income test so that rather than assessing income ‘earned, derived or received’
during the assessment period, the income test will assess employment income
that is paid during the assessment period and
- allow
for data collected by the Australian Tax Office, particularly employment income
reported through the Single Touch Payroll (STP) system, to be shared with
Services Australia for the purposes of administering social security, family
assistance and student payments.
The changes were announced in the 2019–20 Budget and are
expected to provide savings of $2.1 billion over five years from 2018–19.[1]
Background
Social
security income test
All social security income support payments—such as pensions
and allowances—and some veterans’ payments are subject to both income and
assets tests.[2]
The purpose of these means tests is to target income support
to those without the means to support themselves. Under the income test, income
over certain thresholds reduces payment rates, and income over a certain amount
means that a person receives a zero rate or is ineligible for payment. Under
the pension assets test, asset values over certain thresholds reduce payment
rates and asset values over a certain amount mean that a person receives a zero
rate or is ineligible for a pension. For pensions, rates under the income test
and the asset test are calculated and the test resulting in the lowest rate
(which may be a zero rate) applies. For other payments, such as allowances,
asset values over a certain threshold mean that a person is ineligible for
payment (there is no rate reduction—only a test for eligibility).
For both pensions and allowances, the personal income test
assesses ordinary income—this is income that is not maintenance income (child
support) or an exempt lump sum. This can include income from employment, real
estate and businesses, deemed income from investments and boarders or lodgers.[3]
Gross income before any tax is assessed for social security payments. The SS
Act does not assess taxable income.
Income test
for allowance payments
Newstart Allowance recipients can have income of $104 a
fortnight before their payment rate is affected.[4]
Fortnightly rates of Newstart are reduced by 50 cents for every dollar of
income between $104 and $254, and by 60 cents in the dollar for every dollar of
income over $254 in a fortnight. Single parents have a different income
test—their fortnightly rates reduce by 40 cents for every dollar of income over
$104.
Currently, single Newstart Allowance recipients with no
children will not receive any payment if their fortnightly income is $1,075.34
or above. Single principal carers of dependent children will not receive any
payment if their fortnightly income is $1,639.50 or above.[5]
Youth Allowance (Other) recipients can earn up to $143 per
fortnight before their payment rate is affected.[6]
Fortnightly rates of Youth Allowance (Other) are reduced by 50 cents for every
dollar of income between $143 and $250, and by 60 cents for every dollar of
income over $250 per fortnight. A single Youth Allowance (Other) recipient
living away from their family home will not receive any payment if their
fortnightly income is over $943.34.[7]
If a person is a member of a couple, their partner’s
income can also affect their payment rates. Generally, partner income that
exceeds the cut-out point (the level of income at which payment rate would
reach zero) reduces their partner’s fortnightly allowance by 60 cents in the
dollar.[8]
Note that Newstart Allowance will be merged with Sickness
Allowance and Bereavement Allowance into the JobSeeker Payment from 20 March
2020.[9]
The same income test arrangements will apply to the new payment.
Working
credit
The Working Credit scheme allows working age social
security recipients (including Newstart Allowance, Youth Allowance (Other) and
Disability Support Pension recipients) to build up credits during periods when
little or no income is received. These credits can then be used to reduce the
amounts that are assessed under the income test during fortnights in which they
have employment income.[10]
Recipients typically accrue one credit for each dollar of difference between
$48 and their income in each fortnight. For example, if an individual has no
income in a fortnight they can accrue 48 credits; if they earn $40 they can
accrue eight credits and if they earn $48 or more in income they cannot receive
credits in that fortnight. Newstart Allowance recipients can accrue a maximum
of 1,000 credits (so $1,000 of income can be excluded from the income test if
they do take up work). Youth Allowance (Other) recipients can accrue 3,500 credits.
The Working Credit scheme is intended as an incentive for
payment recipients to take up work, including short-term work such as seasonal
work. It works to reduce the disincentive effect of the income test where the
withdrawal of income support partly offsets any increased income from working.
Pension
income test
The pension income test currently allows a single person
to have income of up to $174 per fortnight before their pension rate is
affected.[11]
A couple, combined, can earn up to $308 per fortnight before their pension rate
is affected. Each dollar of income over these amounts reduces a single person’s
and a couple’s combined fortnightly pension rate by 50 cents.
A single pensioner will not receive any payment if their
income reaches $2,040.80 per fortnight. A couple, combined, will not receive
any payment if their income reaches $3,122.00 per fortnight.[12]
Work Bonus
Recipients of any Centrelink pension payment (with the
exception of Parenting Payment Single) or Bereavement Allowance, who are over
Age Pension qualifying age, are eligible for the Work Bonus. Most of those
eligible are receiving the Age Pension but some are receiving other pension
payments including Carer Payment or the Disability Support Pension.[13]
Those who receive a transitional rate of pension are not eligible—transitional
rate pensioners were those who were grandfathered from 2009 pension reforms
because they would have been worse-off under changes to the income test.[14]
The Work Bonus consists of a fortnightly income concession
amount and an income concession bank. The income concession amount allows up to
$300 of fortnightly income from employment income or ‘gainful work’ income to
be deducted from the total income assessed under the income test. The income
concession bank allows any unused portion of that $300 to be accrued to offset
future amounts of gainful work income.[15]
Up to $7,800 may be accrued.
Employment income is income from remunerative work
undertaken by an employee in an employer/employee relationship and includes
salaries, wages and employment-related fringe benefits.[16]
Gainful work is which is any work involving the personal exertion of the
individual but excluding specific activities such as domestic duties and
managing personal financial investments or property.[17]
How employment
income is assessed
The changes proposed in the Bill affect how income is
assessed for the purposes of the income test. Allowance payments rates are
calculated on a fortnightly basis with fortnightly income assessed under the
income test. One-off lump sum amounts are apportioned over a 12 month period in
weekly amounts (which can then be assessed for the relevant fortnight).[18]
Pension payments are normally calculated as an annual rate and then converted
into a fortnightly instalment. Where a pensioner has income from employment,
that income is assessed over a fortnight and then converted to an annual rate
for the pension rate calculation process (with the rate then converted to a
fortnightly instalment).[19]
Income is normally assessed in regards to an ‘instalment
period’. An instalment period is generally the fortnight in respect of which a
person’s payment is calculated—it is also referred to as an ‘entitlement period’.[20]
Normally, a person’s payment delivery day—the day on which their social
security payment is paid to them—is the day after, or two days after the end of
their instalment fortnight.[21]
Payments can only be delivered on weekdays.
Currently, the rate calculators used in the SS Act
to determine payment rates for social security payments assess employment
income in the entitlement period in which it is first earned, derived or
received. An individual usually ‘earns’ their employment income ahead of being
paid at a later date (as opposed to being paid upfront before doing the work).
As such, the income assessed for a particular payment fortnight is not what an
individual has received in their bank account but what they estimate they have
earned based on the number of hours/days worked during that fortnight. This
means that recipients must calculate their earnings for that fortnight
(determining wages including penalty rates and additional allowances) and
report those earnings to Services Australia in order for their payment rate to
be calculated.
Rationale
for the current assessment process
The rationale for the current arrangements is explained in
the Department of Social Services’ Social Security Guide:
As a matter of policy, income test assessment is generally
based on whichever event occurs first, which is usually when people earn the
money. This is because assessing earnings only when received would create
inequities, as it would enable some people to defer receiving their earnings
until the income would have less impact on their income support entitlement.
This would place people who can defer receipt of income in a better financial
position than those paid on a regular basis.[22]
Issues with
the assessment process
The Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill states that the
current process results in errors being made by social security recipients:
In most cases, a person will not know exactly how much
employment income they will be paid for an instalment period until they are
paid at a later date. This frequently results in social security recipients
over-estimating or under-estimating their total employment income for an
instalment period, with the consequence that recipients are either underpaid or
overpaid their social security entitlements.[23]
The Minister for Population, Cities and Urban
Infrastructure, Alan Tudge, stated in his second reading speech that in 2017
there were 15 million corrections to recently reported earnings.[24]
The difficulty presented to payment recipients in needing
to estimate income earned ahead of being paid, particularly for those with
fluctuating income, has been a longstanding issue of concern. In a case heard
by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal in 2009, one payment recipient submitted
that in estimating their income they had done the best they could and that any
errors were the fault of Centrelink for not checking the reported income with
the Australian Tax Office:
Mrs Michalak recognised that the Centrelink notification
requirements forced her to make estimates of her income and she submitted that
this was difficult to do with accuracy. This was because her hours of work
varied from time to time and because her pay slips were received days after the
end of the relevant reporting period. She submitted that she had done all that
she could to satisfy the Centrelink requirements and had not done anything to
falsely represent her income to Centrelink. She submitted that Centrelink was
at fault for not checking her income against Australian Taxation Office records
and that, if this had been done, the overpayment may have been noted earlier
and the debt reduced. In that sense, she submitted that the debt arose solely
because of error on the part of the Commonwealth.[25]
In 2001, the Australian Council of Social Service raised a
separate issue with the income reporting arrangements: that recipients’ income
support rates are reduced despite them not actually being paid their employment
income until a much later date:
The "failure to correctly declare income" is
compounded by the long standing problem relating to the definition of income
itself in the social security legislation. Defining income as "any money
earned, derived or received" rather than simply as money
"received", places enormous difficulties on thousands of social
security recipients every week.
Constantly, people are placed in the untenable position of
having to declare income when it is earned even though it will not be received
for two, and up to six, weeks. Despite this, Centrelink will reduce fortnightly
payments immediately, leaving people with insufficient funds to pay the rent,
buy food and/or be able to satisfy the activity test the next fortnight.[26]
Proposed
changes
The Bill’s amendments only affect how income from
employment is to be assessed under the income test. The assessment of other
forms of income, such as income from financial investments will be unchanged.
The changes affect how employment income is assessed for
all social security payments as well as some means-tested veterans’ payments.
Under the proposed changes, the income assessed will be
based on the income actually paid to the person in the instalment period. The
calculations will be based on when the amount is paid by the employer, not when
it is actually received.
In his second reading speech, the Minister stated that the
information that needs to be reported to Services Australia will appear on an
individual’s payslips or be available from their employers.[27]
Payment recipients will not need to calculate their entitlements or the
relevant periods outlined above. They will only need to enter their gross
employment income and the pay period it is for.
It is intended that in 2020–21, some employment income
information will be prefilled by linking to Australian Tax Office (ATO) data
(see next section). However, payment recipients will still be obligated to
report their income and to verify any prefilled data.
Exchange of
information
The Government has proposed new information sharing
between the ATO and Services Australia to ‘facilitate’ the new income
assessment model.[28]
Data from the ATO’s new Single Touch Payroll system is to be shared in real
time with Services Australia. The intent here is for Services Australia to prefill
the online employment income reporting fields for payment recipients based on
what employers have reported to the ATO. Social security recipients will then
only have to verify the prefilled information.
Existing
information sharing arrangements
There have been longstanding arrangements providing for
information sharing between the ATO and Services Australia (and its
predecessors) including computer-automated data matching procedures used since
the 1990s.[29]
The SS Admin Act provides broad information
gathering powers for the purposes of administering social security law,
particularly for the purposes of verifying claims for social security payments
and payment rates. Special provisions provide and set conditions for the
obtaining and sharing of protected information about a person, and for the
Commissioner of Taxation to provide information contained in Tax File Number
declarations to Services Australia.[30]
Protected information, as defined in the SS Act, includes information
obtained by an officer under social security law[31],
information held by Services Australia or the Department of Social Services and
information obtained by an officer under family assistance law[32]
that is or was held in the records of the ATO.[33]
Previously, Services Australia and the ATO shared data
under a formal data-matching program governed by the Data-matching Program
(Assistance and Tax) Act 1990 to identify potential overpayments. The
legislation specified review cycles and time limits, and required reports to
Parliament on the costs and benefits of the program.[34]
Services Australia ceased using this data-matching program in 2015–16 (though it
has continued to undertake data-matching under the Act on behalf of the
Department of Veterans’ Affairs).[35]
Instead of a program governed by the Data-matching
Program (Assistance and Tax) Act 1990, Services Australia has, in recent
years, initiated other data-matching programs using its information gathering
powers under the SS Admin Act. Current data-matching programs using ATO
data include the Pay-As-You-Go (PAYG) Data Matching Program and the Non-Employment
Income Data Matching Program. The PAYG Data Matching Program protocols describe
the legal authority under which data from PAYG payment summaries is shared with
Services Australia:
- section
195 of the SS Admin Act: power to obtain information about a class of
persons
- section
192 of the SS Admin Act: general power to obtain information of
relevance to the assessment of claims for payments that Services Australia
administers
- section
196 of the SS Admin Act: requirement that Services Australia provide a
written notice to the ATO of the information requirements requested under
section 192 and 195 and
- Australian
Privacy Principle 6 which provides that personal information can be used
or disclosed by an agency where that disclosure is required or authorised by or
under law.[36]
The protocol notes that the ATO is required to comply with
formal notices under section 192 and 195 and that the Taxation
Administration Act 1953 provides for the ATO to disclose information to the
Department of Human Services (now Services Australia) where the disclosure is
for the purpose of administering the social security law.[37]
The protocol for the Non-Employment Income Data Matching
Program cites the same legal authority as the PAYG Data Marching Program.[38]
Use of
Single Touch Payroll data
At the December 2019 hearing of the Senate Community Affairs
Committee inquiry into Centrelink’s Compliance Program, ATO Acting Second
Commissioner, Client Engagement, Jeremy Hirschhorn explained the proposed use
of Single Touch Payroll data:
Mr Hirschhorn : I would add, the ultimate
aim of DHS [Department of Human Services, now known as Services Australia], as
I understand it, is that this information would be pre-populated into people's
estimates so that when people had to disclose their income each fortnight, it
would already be there in their forms, which is obviously of much greater
convenience if things are pre-filled rather than having to work them out
yourself.
CHAIR: Is this where someone's earning regularly, you
mean?
Mr Hirschhorn : So, when someone's earned income
from an employer, as we have more and more complete take-up of single touch
payroll across the employer community, more and more of that will be made
available in the way it can be pre-populated and put in people's disclosures
each fortnight.
Senator O'NEILL: Can I ask the averaging question at
this point in time? Is it going to be averaged data that gets pre-populated or
is it going to be specific data that relates to the lumpiness of people in
insecure employment across this country?
Mr Hirschhorn : This is based on real
time—when people are paid—and it's based on their actual income. My
understanding is that in the past people have had to not estimate how much
they've been paid but do the quite complicated task of estimating how much
they've earned during a period—so work out how many hours they have not yet
been paid for. My understanding is that the system is moving more towards how
much they've been paid during a period, so this data is, by definition, linked
to how much people were paid during a period.[39]
At the same hearing, ATO officials advised that Single
Touch Payroll currently covers around 11.5 million individual employees
and around 800,000 employers.[40]
The Multi-agency Government submission to the Senate
Community Affairs Committee inquiry to the Bill stated that the ATO commenced
sharing Single Touch Payroll data with Services Australia when the ATO has been
notified that an employee is a customer of Services Australia.[41]
The data that is collected in Single Touch Payroll phase 1 includes an
employee’s salaries and wages, tax, lump sum payments and allowances as
reported in their corresponding PAYG payment summaries.
From 1 July 2020, the ATO intends to collect more granular
data including the disaggregation of gross income to include commissions and
bonuses as well as child support information—this will be Single Touch Payroll
phase 2.[42]
Where employers report this information, it will be used to prefill employment
income details for income support recipients. Reporting of this information
will be mandatory for all employers from 1 July 2021 except those
with four or fewer employees. Prefilling of employment income details for
income support recipients will be fully-rolled out from this date.[43]
The Multi-agency Government submission states that 95 per
cent of recipients are expected to be covered by the Single Touch Payroll system
and have their details prefilled by 1 July 2021.[44]
Proposed changes
The proposed amendments in the Bill are intended to allow
for the taxation information held by the ATO and protected information held by
Services Australia about individuals to be shared between Services Australia
and the ATO in order to administer social security law, family assistance law
and the Student Assistance Act 1973 (which provides for the ABSTUDY
scheme). The amendments also specify that this information sharing may be
automated using computer programs.
As discussed above, Services Australia and the ATO already
share information, including taxation information. The Explanatory Memorandum
states that the proposed amendments are to:
... remove any doubt that the administering Secretary and other
officers who make decisions under the family assistance law, social security
law and Student Assistance Act can participate in these information exchanges
consistently with the confidentiality provisions of those Acts and the Privacy
Act. The provisions of this Part that do this are enacted for the avoidance of
doubt, but will also enhance transparency to how Single Touch Payroll data is
used.[45]
Family assistance law provides for payments such as Family
Tax Benefit and Child Care Subsidy. These payments are not affected by the
proposed changes to employment income assessments. However, taxation data can
be used to reconcile entitlements to these payments. The Explanatory Memorandum
does not provide a specific reason as to why the amendments to family
assistance law are included in this Bill as these payments are not affected by
the changes to employment income assessments.
Committee
consideration
Senate
Community Affairs Legislation Committee
On 6 February 2020, the Bill was referred to the Senate
Community Affairs Legislation Committee for inquiry. The Committee tabled its report
on 20 February 2020.[46]
Details of the inquiry are available from the inquiry
homepage.[47]
The Committee made three recommendations:
- that
there be further targeted consultation and user testing prior to the
commencement of the new reporting system
- that
the Government commit to initiate a review of the implementation of the new
reporting system within 12 months of the commencement of the legislation and
the review be tabled in the Parliament and
- that
the Senate passes the Bill.[48]
These recommendations reflected the calls by many
stakeholders for consultation and thorough testing of the new system, and for a
review of the impact of the new system to be undertaken (see ‘Position of major
interest groups’ section below).
Labor Senators made additional comments and, while
supporting the recommendations of the majority report, made two additional
recommendations:
- that
the Government ‘take all reasonable steps’ during the transition period to the
new system to detect, confirm and correct over-reporting of income and
- that
the review of the implementation of the new system be conducted independently
with consultation with experts and social security recipients.[49]
The Australian Greens also made additional comments and
made eight additional recommendations:
- the
Bill be amended to provide a clear definition of what is meant by ‘employment
period’ in the Bill (see ‘Issues with determining the employment period’ in the
‘Key issues and provisions’ section below)
- the
Government provide guidance on how the Secretary should use their discretion to
determine an employment period where employment income is paid but not in
respect of a particular timeframe
- the
Government undertake comprehensive user testing on a large and diverse range of
cohorts
- that
the Government undertake user testing with experts and social security
stakeholders
- the
measures be delayed if this testing cannot be undertaken in time for the 1 July
2020 commencement
- the
Government guarantee that people not be unduly penalised if they misreport
income during the transition period
- the
Government ensures appropriate support services are available to ensure income
support recipients receive the correct entitlement, including tailored services
for Indigenous people and people from culturally and linguistically diverse
backgrounds
- the
Bill be amended to include a requirement for a public, independent review one
year after commencement of the operation of the Act, and ensure this review
includes advice from a panel of income support recipients.[50]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
had no comment on the Bill.[51]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
The Shadow Minister for Families and Social Services,
Linda Burney, stated that the Australian Labor Party (Labor) supported the Bill
but was ‘seriously concerned about the government’s ability to implement these changes’.[52]
Labor Senators made two additional recommendations to the Senate Community
Affairs Legislation Committee report on the Bill (see ‘Committee consideration’
section above).
The Australian Greens support the Bill but recommended a
number of amendments and other measures in their Additional Comments to the
Senate Community Affairs Legislation Committee report on the Bill (see
‘Committee consideration’ section above).
At the time of writing, other non-government parties and
independents had not commented on the Bill.
Position of
major interest groups
National
Social Security Rights Network
The National Social Security Rights Network (NSSRN) has
stated it broadly supports the proposed change to income assessment.[53]
In its submission to the Senate Community Affairs Committee inquiry into the
Bill, the NSSRN made a number of recommendations to achieve the aims of the
Bill:
- Further
consultation be undertaken with people affected and the organisations
representing them to identify gaps in the new reporting process and
transitional arrangements;
- Sufficient
time and resources are invested to ensure effective communication of the new
reporting process and transitional arrangements to those affected;
- Sufficient
support is provided to people who may have difficulty understanding the new
reporting process and transitional arrangements; and
- Consideration
be given to shifting the weight of information-gathering responsibilities onto
government where it is better placed than income support recipients to obtain
the correct income information, particularly given the complexity of the system
and vulnerability of many recipients.
Australian
Council of Social Service
The Australian Council of Social Service recommends:
- the
Bill be passed
- there
be thorough testing of the proposed changes
- the
government develop a means of detecting double-counting of income during the
transition period
- privacy
provisions be strengthened so that personal information cannot be released
publicly without the person’s explicit informed consent
- the
legislation be reviewed after 12 months to ensure it is operating in the best
interests of income support recipients.[54]
Australian
Unemployed Workers Union
The Australian Unemployed Workers Union (AUWU), an
organisation representing social security recipients, raised concerns that
there was a lack of consultation regarding the details of the Bill and with
potential issues that could arise in the implementation of the new income
reporting system.[55]
The AUWU also called for rigorous testing of the new system prior to
implementation.[56]
Victoria
Legal Aid
Victoria Legal Aid (VLA) also noted that there was a very
short timeframe provided for consultation on the Bill (through the Senate
Committee inquiry).[57]
VLA raised some issues with the drafting of certain sections of the Bill (see
‘Key issues and provisions’ section of this digest) and recommended that
further information be provided on how the Single Touch Payroll system would be
integrated with Centrelink’s income reporting system.[58]
VLA also recommended the Government provide clear guidance on how those outside
the Single Touch Payroll system would be affected.[59]
Financial
implications
The change to the social security income assessment model
is expected to provide $2.1 billion in savings over the forward estimates.[60]
In their submission to the Senate Community Affairs
Legislation Committee inquiry into the Bill, government agencies stated that
the savings were estimated using data from the Department of Social Services’
Random Sample Survey:
The savings for this measure were determined by extrapolating
the instances of over and under reporting of employment income across the
income support system using the Department of Social Services’ Random Sample
Survey ... Within the Random Sample Survey, ‘payment accuracy’ refers to the
proportion of social security outlays (in dollars) that have been paid to the
right person, for the right payment, at the right rate, on the right date. The
accuracy of reported employment income is consistently rated as one of the
highest risks to payment accuracy in the Random Sample Survey.[61]
The Random Sample Survey reviews a sample of all the major
social security payment types to detect whether they are receiving an accurate
payment rate in order to provide benchmark data on the level of inaccurate
payments.[62]
In 2018–19 the sample surveyed 20,427 payment recipients with an overall
accuracy level of 94.69 per cent. Accuracy differed markedly by payment type
with the accuracy for Age Pension at 97.10 per cent but only 68.23 per cent for
Sickness Allowance (with a confidence interval of +/- 5.09 per cent).[63]
The savings are to be derived from improved payment
accuracy—through both the new income reporting rules and the prefilling of
employment income data provided by the ATO. This means that the savings will
derive from reducing the number of estimated overpayments that are made but
which are not currently identified and recovered. That such significant savings
are to be made underlines the fiscal cost of existing inaccuracies.
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.[64]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights had no
comment on the Bill.[65]
Key issues
and provisions
Schedule 1: Part 1—Simplifying income reporting
Part 1 of Schedule 1 will amend the SS Act, the SS
Admin Act and the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986 so that recipients
of income support payments will report the employment income that is paid to
them rather than the income earned from employment in a relevant period.
Who is
affected
All social security and veterans’ payment recipients with
employment income will be affected by the proposed changes.
Minister Tudge stated in his second reading speech that
‘around 550,000 people report income to Centrelink in any given fortnight and
1.2 million people report income at least once a year’.[66]
Table 1 sets out the most recent data from the Department
of Social Services (from September 2019) showing social security payment
recipients who reported earnings from employment income in the previous
fortnight.
Table 1:
Social security payment recipients by earnings from employment, September 2019
Payment type |
Earnings from employment in last fortnight |
Total |
No earnings |
Had earnings |
ABSTUDY (Living Allowance) |
7,528 |
1,643 |
9,171 |
Age Pension |
2,418,404 |
106,720 |
2,525,124 |
Austudy |
24,365 |
12,443 |
36,808 |
Carer Payment |
256,215 |
25,718 |
281,933 |
Disability Support Pension |
689,522 |
58,240 |
747,762 |
Newstart Allowance |
551,866 |
128,143 |
680,009 |
Parenting Payment Partnered |
62,448 |
7,491 |
69,939 |
Parenting Payment Single |
160,475 |
64,946 |
225,421 |
Partner Allowance |
941 |
54 |
995 |
Sickness Allowance |
4,501 |
465 |
4,966 |
Special Benefit |
6,714 |
101 |
6,815 |
Widow Allowance |
7,108 |
370 |
7,478 |
Wife Pension (Partner on Age Pension) |
3,471 |
505 |
3,976 |
Wife Pension (Partner on Disability Support Pension) |
3,036 |
822 |
3,858 |
Youth Allowance (other) |
62,763 |
13,785 |
76,548 |
Youth Allowance (student and apprentice) |
115,186 |
75,829 |
191,059 |
Total
|
4,374,543
|
497,275
|
4,871,818
|
Note: Data on Widow B Pension recipients with earnings not
published in source and Widow B Pension recipients excluded from total figure
above.
Source: Department of Social Services (DSS), ‘DSS Demographics: September 2019’,
data.gov.au website.
Will payment
recipients be better or worse off?
The impact of the changes will depend on the circumstances
of individual payment recipients: their employment type, their payment cycles,
their instalment period, the regularity of their payment, and any Working
Credit or Work Bonus balance they have accrued.
The Parliamentary Library calculated entitlements for a
single Newstart Allowance recipient in different scenarios under both the
current and proposed income assessment system—this included scenarios where the
individual had a Working Credit balance and where they did not. There were
situations where the individual received a higher rate under both the current
and under the proposed system (and vice versa)—the impact was entirely
dependent on the specific circumstances of the individual and there was no
clear way of estimating those who would be better or worse off under the proposed
changes.
At a hearing for the Senate Community Affairs Legislation
Committee inquiry into the Bill, officers from the Department of Social
Services were asked whether there were any scenarios where people could be
better off as a result of the changes. The officers proposed a situation where
someone commences employment—under the current system they could receive a
reduced payment rate before they received any income from the employment while
under the proposed model they would continue to receive their normal payment
rate until they received their first pay. The Department was unable to provide
estimates as to how many would benefit:
Part of it will come back to how the actual pay that they
receive lines up to their entitlement period, and for the period of time et
cetera. I'm effectively providing a 'yes; someone could be, hypothetically,
better off through the system than under the current received model'. But I
couldn't articulate, in terms of statistics, how many people that would be or
the level of the benefit.[67]
That the measure will deliver savings indicates that
overall, many payment recipients will be worse-off as they will receive lower
payments than under the current system. That is, there will be fewer
overpayments that will not be detected. The Department of Social Services
provided some estimates of the numbers affected:
Without having a specific dollar figure, I can say, under the
change, in any given fortnight of income support recipients who report
employment income, we estimate approximately 2.4 per cent will have their
income support payments reduced, and approximately 0.8 per cent of income
support recipients will have an increase in their benefit.[68]
Implementation
The new income reporting method is a very significant
change to how income support payments are administered and to longstanding
reporting requirements imposed on payment recipients. Successful implementation
of the changes will require resources to communicate the changes, deliver the
information technology to make the new system easy to use, and allow for
payment recipients to contact Services Australia quickly when issues arise or
where further information is needed.
In their submission to the Senate Community Affairs
Committee inquiry into the Bill, government agencies set out some of the
resources that would be used as part of the implementation process:
- a
bulk mail-out and targeted messaging (such as via social media and webpage
updates) to payment recipients informing them of the changes in advance
- messages
advising recipients of their changed requirements would be included in the
reporting channels (such as the online portal and mobile applications) during
the transition process
- translated
fact-sheets and Indigenous radio announcements
- video-on-demand
tutorials
- a
‘BOT assistant’ to provide step-by-step guidance through the digital income
reporting channels
- a
special calculator to help recipients work out what they should report during
the transition period and
- face-to-face
training for all Services Australia staff.[69]
Payment recipients will continue to report income via
their Centrelink online account through myGov, the Express Plus Centrelink
application, self-service reporting phone lines, staff-assisted phone lines or
at service centres.[70]
The same channels will continue to be used for confirming
income information provided through the Single Touch Payroll System.[71]
Definition
of employment income
A key amendment is a change in the definition of
employment income so that it no longer refers to income ‘earned, derived or
received’ but simply to income for remunerative work as an employee.
Item 1 amends the definition of employment
income at paragraph 8(1A)(a) of the SS Act to remove reference
to income ‘earned, derived or received, or that is taken to have been earned,
derived or received, by the person for remunerative work undertaken by the
person as an employee in an employer/employee relationship’. Employment
income will be defined as the ordinary income of the person ‘that is
for remunerative work of the person as an employee in an employer/employee
relationship’.
Income test
changes
The main amendments affect the rate calculators for
various income support payments with changes to make clear that employment
income is to be assessed under the proposed new method and the method itself to
be set out in Division 1AA of Part 3.10 of the SS Act.
Current
assessment process
As set out in the ‘Background’ section, the social
security income test normally assesses income in regards to an ‘instalment
period’. An instalment period is generally the fortnight in respect of which a
person’s payment is calculated. Currently, the employment income assessed for a
particular payment fortnight is not what an individual has received in their
bank account but what they have earned based on the number of hours/days worked
during that fortnight. Recipients must calculate their employment income for
that fortnight and report that income to Services Australia in order for their
payment rate to be calculated.
New
assessment process
The proposed new assessment process will be based on the
employment income paid to a person during their instalment period. However,
that employment income may be assessed over multiple instalment periods
depending on the period of employment the income is paid for. The Bill
introduces new terms covering the period of time a person’s employment income
is paid for (their employment period) and the period of time that
income will be averaged over in order to be assessed under the income test (the
assessment period).
The new process assesses employment income paid on a day
in a social security instalment period. Whether or not the person has received
the employment income on that day is not taken into account.
An employment period is a period of time which employment
income is paid in respect of. An assessment period is equal to the number of
days in an employment period but commences on the first day of the payment
recipient’s instalment period in which the employment income is paid. An
individual may be paid employment income in respect of different employment
periods within the same instalment period. They may also have multiple
assessment periods of different lengths, and they may have overlapping
assessment periods.
The amount of employment income paid is averaged over the
relevant assessment period (by dividing the relevant total by the number of
days in the assessment period). Where an assessment period only overlaps with
part of a person’s instalment period, then the daily amounts of those
overlapping days are added together to form the attributed employment
income. A payment recipient is considered to have earned on each day of
the instalment period an amount equal to the attributed employment income
divided by the number of days in the instalment period (usually 14 days). Daily
attribution can be important in working out Working Credit depletions and
accrual.
Table 2 sets out key terms in the assessment model and the
examples used in the Bill.
Table 2: Key
terms used in the new assessment model
Key term
|
Definition
|
Example
|
Instalment period
|
The period of time over which an income support
recipient’s payment entitlement is calculated. Usually, a fortnight.
|
A person’s instalment fortnight begins on 1 June
and ends on 14 June. The person needs to report any employment income
paid during this period.
|
Employment period
|
A period of time for which a person is paid employment
income.
|
On 3 June a person is paid $756 in employment income for
work the person performed in a period beginning on 9 May and ending 29 May.
The employment period is 21 days in duration.
|
Assessment period
|
A period in which a person receives employment income.
The assessment period commences on the first day of a person’s social
security payment instalment period. The duration of the assessment period is
equal to the sum of the number of days in each employment period.
|
The person’s instalment period begins on 1 June and ends
on 14 June.
The person’s assessment period is 21 days beginning on 1
June.
The person is taken to have received $756 over the period
beginning on 1 June and ending at the end of 21 June (21 days).
The person is taken to have received $36 on each of the
days in the assessment period.
|
Attributed employment income
|
Income taken to have been received over an assessment
period that makes up part, but not the whole, of an instalment period. This
attributed employment income is apportioned to the number of days in the
instalment period.
|
For the next instalment period beginning on 15 June and
ending on 28 June the person is taken to have received employment income for
that part of the period which overlaps with the assessment period: 15–21
June. The person is taken to have received $252 during this overlap period
($36 multiplied by seven days).
Under the attributed employment income provisions, the
person is taken to have received $18 on each day in the instalment period
beginning on 15 June ($252 divided by 14 days).
|
Sources: Proposed section 1073A inserted by item 37, Social
Services and Other Legislation Amendment (Simplifying Income Reporting and
Other Measures) Bill 2020; ‘Payment by instalments’, Section 43, Social Security
(Administration) Act 1999.
The Multi-agency submission to the
Senate Community Affairs Legislation Committee inquiry into the Bill included a
diagram comparing the current income reporting mode (the ‘Earned Assessment
Model’) with the proposed new system (the ‘Paid Assessment Model). This is
copied at Figure 1.
Figure 1: Diagram of current income
report model (Earned Assessment Model) and proposed new model (Paid Assessment
Model)
Source: Multi-agency Government [Department of Social Services,
Services Australia and Australian Taxation Office], Submission
to the Senate Community Affairs Legislation Committee, Inquiry into the Social
Services and Other Legislation Amendment (Simplifying Income Reporting and
Other Measures) Bill 2020, [Submission no. 6], p. 17.
Issues with determining the
employment period
In its submission to the Senate Community Affairs
Committee inquiry into the Bill, Victoria Legal Aid (VLA) raised concerns that a
method for determining employment periods was not clearly defined.[72]
In the Bill, an employment period is a ‘particular period’ for which employment
income is paid in respect of. The Explanatory Memorandum states that this rule
is to be used where ‘it is possible to identify the particular period or
periods to which the employment income relates’.[73]
VLA states that ‘it is not clear what is meant by the “particular period to
which the employment income relates”. It could be the pay cycle period, the
number of days of work or the period during which the person worked’.[74]
The Minister’s second reading speech states that recipients
will need to report the pay period dates which appear on their payslips.[75]
It would appear that these pay periods are what will generally be referred to
with the term employment period. However, the use of the term in the Bill is
ambiguous as to what is being referred to and it could be read to refer to the
period of days actually worked or the period of a pay cycle in which the
person’s work hours occurred. The interpretation of this term will need to be specified
in policy guidelines.
This ambiguity has a flow-on effect as separate provisions
in the Bill (new section 1073BA) set out a method for the Secretary (that
is, Services Australia) to attribute employment income over a certain period
where it is considered to have not been paid in respect of a particular period.
The lack of clarity over what should be considered the ‘particular period’ for
which employment income is paid could mean that Services Australia will
determine the period that income should be attributed to. There are no specific
criteria guiding how that period of time should be determined, only that the
period cannot be more than 52 weeks.
The current system assesses employment income earned in a
clearly defined period: the person’s instalment period. It assesses
remunerative work undertaken within that set period. The new assessment process
is based on an ‘employment period’ which can vary based on the individual
circumstances of the work and the payment arrangements. The Bill, as drafted,
provides no guidance as to how to work out this critical variable in
determining an income support recipient’s payment rate.
VLA recommended the Bill be amended to clarify what ‘in
respect of a particular period’ means, how such a period is to be identified
and by whom, and the circumstances in which it can be said that employment
income is ‘not in respect of a particular period’.[76]
Victoria Legal Aid also noted similar provisions elsewhere in the Bill which
provide for the Secretary to determine periods that should include some
guidance as to how the periods should be determined.
Anti-avoidance
provisions
The Bill proposes a special provision (proposed section
1073BB) to cover situations where Services Australia considers that one or more
persons is deferring the payment of employment income in order to qualify for a
social security payment or receive a higher rate than would otherwise be
payable. That is, where it is considered that a person or persons entered into
a scheme with a main purpose of obtaining some advantage from the social
security system. In such cases, the Secretary can determine the period that the
payment claimant or recipient is taken to have received the employment income
amount. As discussed in the previous section, no specific guidance is provided
as to how such a period will be determined and there is no maximum period that
may be determined.
As noted in the Background section of this Bills Digest,
the rationale for the current system assessing income earned rather than when
received is that it would create inequities: it would enable some people to
defer receiving their earnings until the income would have less impact on their
income support entitlement. The anti-avoidance provision is included to address
this potential inequity.
It is unclear how those engaging in avoidance or income
deferral will be detected or what evidence of such a scheme will be required
for the anti-avoidance provisions to apply.
Key income
test provisions
Item 11 amends the Youth Allowance income test at Point
1067G-H23 which currently provides that, subject to certain conditions,
ordinary income is to be taken into account in the fortnight in which it is
first earned, derived or received. Item 11 inserts an exception to this rule
for employment income. Item 12 adds a note at this point to see Division
1AA of Part 3.10 for the treatment of employment income.
Point 1067G-H24(a) of the Youth Allowance income
test sets out a method for calculating regular payments received at intervals
longer than one fortnight (for example, where a person receives their wages
monthly). The method divides the amount received by the number of days in the period
the income is paid for (the work period) and multiplies this daily rate by the
number of days in the Youth Allowance payment fortnight that are also within
the work period. Item 15 amends this point so that this method is
applied to payments of ordinary income except employment income.
Similar amendments to items 11, 12 and 15 are made to the
Austudy income test (items 16, 17 and 20) and the Benefit Rate
Calculator used for Newstart Allowance, Sickness Allowance, Widow Allowance and
Partner Allowance (items 21, 22 and 25).
Items 16–17 make similar amendments to the Austudy
income test at Point 1067L-D19 as Items 11–12 make to the Youth
Allowance income test.
Item 20 makes a similar amendment to the Austudy
income test at Point 1067L-D23 as item 15 makes to the Youth Allowance
income test.
Item 26 repeals the example at Point 1068-G8
which explains how income received from remunerative work undertaken over 25
days is spread over three payment fortnights for the purposes of the Benefit
Rate Calculator. As the example relates to what would be considered employment
income, it is not relevant to Point 1068-G8.
Item 27 amends the income test for Parenting
Payment Partnered at Point 1068-D19 which currently allows the Secretary
of the Department of Social Services to determine the period over which a
person’s ordinary income is to be taken into account (up to a maximum of 52
weeks). Item 27 inserts an exception so that this provision does not apply to
employment income. Point 1068-D20 provides that a person’s ordinary
income for any particular period is to be reduced to a fortnightly rate. Item
30 inserts an exception so that this provision does not apply to employment
income.
Item 34 amends paragraph 1073AA(4BA)(a) to
specify that in working out work bonus income for an instalment
period, a person’s employment income is that taken to have been received (as
worked out by the proposed new sections in Division 1AA). Item 35
repeals subsection 1073AA(5) which currently provides for employment
income to be interpreted, for the purposes of the work bonus, as including an
‘amount that is taken to have been earned, derived or received over that
period’. This interpretation will be redundant.
Item 37 repeals sections 1073A and 1073B and
inserts new sections 1073A, 1073B, 1073BA, 1073BB, 1073BC, and 1073BD
which provide the main provisions for determining how employment income is to
be assessed under the social security income test.
Currently, section 1073A provides that lump sum employment
income (paid in respect of a period greater than a fortnight or not in respect
of any particular period) received by a person who is receiving a pension
payment (such as Disability Support Pension or the Age Pension), can be taken
to be earned, derived or received over such period, not exceeding 52 weeks, as
the Secretary of the Department of Social Services determines. The current
policy, as set out in the Social Security Guide is to spread the income
earned over the relevant period (that is, apportion the income evenly over the
period) or, if there is not a particular period, to spread the income over the
52 weeks from the date the pensioner became entitled to the amount.[77]
Section 1073B currently applies to those below Age Pension
age. It provides that where a person earns, derives or receives (or is taken to
earn, derive or receive as under section 1073A) employment income during a
particular instalment period, the person is taken to have earned an amount on
each day of the instalment period worked out by dividing the total amount of
that employment income by the number of days in the instalment period. That is,
the amount taken to have been earned, derived or received in that instalment
period is averaged over the number of days in that instalment period. The
number of days the person actually worked is disregarded.
New section 1073A is used to assess employment
income paid in respect of a particular period or periods of work (an employment
period) where one or more amounts of employment income have been paid
in an instalment period. The section applies separately where there are
separate employers. Pensioners receiving employment income on a monthly basis
may have their income worked out under new section 1073B while
employment income that is not paid in respect of a particular period is worked
out under new section 1073BA.
A person is taken to receive employment income over a
period known as the assessment period which starts on the first
day of the instalment period and is equal to the number of days in the employment
period. For each day in the assessment period, the person is taken to
have received an amount of employment income worked out by dividing the total
amount of employment income from that employer by the number of days in the
assessment period. Where a person’s employment income is taken to have been paid
during only part of a particular instalment period, the person is taken to
receive on each day of that instalment period an amount worked out by dividing
the portion of their employment income attributed to that instalment period
divided by the number of days in the instalment period.
The section applies to employment income paid on a day in
an instalment period. Whether or not the person has received the employment
income on that day is not taken into account.
Where a person has multiple employment periods with the
same employer, any overlapping days must be counted only once in working out
the sum of the number of days in each employment period.
A person may have different assessment periods overlapping
with their instalment periods. All of the amounts attributed to the days in
that instalment period will be added together as the employment income
component of ordinary income assessed under the income test.
New section 1073B applies to those receiving a
social security pension where the person receives employment income in respect
of a one month period once a month, and the Secretary of the Department of
Social Services is satisfied that the same amount will continue to be paid on
the corresponding day of the next calendar month (or last day of that month if
there is no such day) for the foreseeable future. That is, the pensioner is
expected to regularly receive the same employment income on a monthly basis,
paid on the same day for the foreseeable future.
For those to whom section 1073B applies, their employment
income will, from the day they are first paid and each after that, be taken as
the initial monthly amount multiplied by 12 and divided by 364. That is, it
will be averaged out across an entire year.
Where a person ceases to satisfy the Secretary that they
will continue to receive the same amount on a monthly basis, then the yearly
averaging will cease to apply at the end of one month beginning on the last
payment day.
Where a person is taken to have received employment income
under this section for part but not the whole of an instalment period, then the
amount of attributed employment income for that instalment period will be averaged
over the number of days in the instalment period (see attributed employment
income definition in Table 1).
New section 1073BA sets out how employment income
that is not paid in respect of a particular period of time is to be attributed.
The Explanatory Memorandum gives the example of a bonus paid by an employer
that is not in relation to a specified period.[78]
Section 1073BA provides for the Secretary to determine the period of time over
which the person is taken to have received this employment income, limited to a
maximum period of 52 weeks. The amount of income is averaged over the number of
days in the period determined by the Secretary. The period the income is taken
to have been received must commence on the first day in the instalment period
in which the employment income is paid. Where a person is taken to have
received employment income under this section for part but not the whole of an
instalment period, then the amount of attributed employment income for that
instalment period will be averaged over the number of days in the instalment
period (see attributed employment income definition in Table 1).
New section 1073BB is the anti-avoidance provision
and provides for the Secretary to determine that a person will be taken to have
received employment income during a particular period, in situations where one
or more persons (which may include the payment recipient) has entered into,
commenced or carried out a scheme to defer the payment of employment income for
the sole or dominant purpose of obtaining a social security advantage.
A social security advantage is one which enables a person
to obtain a social security pension or benefit, a Service Pension, an Income
Support Supplement, a Veteran Payment or a payment under the ABSTUDY scheme; or
receive a higher rate of one of these payments than would otherwise be payable.
A scheme can include any agreement, understanding, promise or
undertaking, where express or implied, whether or not enforceable or intended
to be enforceable by legal proceedings. A scheme also includes any plan,
proposal or action whether there are two or more parties or only one involved.
Periods determined by the Secretary must commence on the
first day of the instalment period where the person earned or derived the
employment income for which payment was deferred. The amount of employment
income is averaged over the number of days in the period determined by the
Secretary. Where a person is taken to have received employment income under
this section for part but not the whole of an instalment period, then the
amount of attributed employment income for that instalment period will be
averaged over the number of days in the instalment period (see attributed
employment income definition in Table 1).
Determinations by the Secretary under this section are
reviewable decisions and can be appealed to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal
or the Federal Court.[79]
New section 1073BC provides that employment income
attribution rules in the preceding sections do not apply to leave payments that
fall under specific rules in the rate calculators for specific payments. These
rate calculators include rules to attribute the leave payments over a
particular period.
New section 1073BD is intended to cover situations
where a person receives employment but the circumstances are not provided for
in sections 1073A, 1073B, 1073BA or 1073BB. In such situations, the amount of
employment income received during the instalment period is to be averaged over
the number of days in the instalment period.
Item 39 repeals and substitutes step 1 of the
method statement at section 1073F which is used for working out
accruals and depletions of working credit for social security benefit
recipients. Currently, step 1 refers to employment income earned, derived or
received on the day. New step 1 refers to employment income taken, in
accordance with Division 1AA, to have been received on that day. Item 40
makes a similar amendment to the method statement at section 1073H which is
used for working out accruals and depletions of working credit for social
security pension recipients.
In a similar way, items 41 and 42 replace
references to employment income being earned, derived or received at subparagraphs
1073J(b)(i) and (ii), respectively, to references to employment income that
is taken, under a provision the SS Act, as received. These subparagraphs
are part of provisions covering situations where a person who starts receiving
or increases employment income can continue to be treated as qualified as a
social security recipient due to a working credit balance.
Transitional
arrangements
Transitional arrangements are set out in item 72 to
cover the period where the new income assessment arrangements are implemented.
Where a person has an instalment period that overlaps with the commencement of
the new income assessment process, income received during that period will be
assessed under the new assessment rules. However, if it was income earned or
derived before the commencement of item 72 and had already been taken into
account in calculating the person’s payment rate, it will be excluded from the
calculation under the new income assessment process. The new assessment process
also does not apply to lump sum amounts paid prior to the commencement of item
72 (as these will have been assessed under the existing rules).
Pension
Bonus Scheme
Item 5 inserts new subsection 93H(2A) which
provides for the amendments in Part 1 of Schedule 1 of the Bill to not apply
when working out a person’s annual pension rate for the purposes of the Pension
Bonus Scheme. Under the scheme, which has been closed to registration since 1 July 2014,
participants earn bonus payments if they have deferred receipt of the Age
Pension and continued to work past age pension age.[80]
The new subsection will ensure that employment income paid after a person has
ceased working will not affect the calculation of their pension bonus amount.
Schedule 1:
Part 2—Exchange of information relating to taxation information
The amendments in Part 2 of Schedule 1 will allow for
taxation information held by the ATO and protected information held by Services
Australia about individuals to be shared between Services Australia and the ATO
in order to administer social security law, family assistance law and the Student
Assistance Act 1973 (which provides for the ABSTUDY scheme). The amendments
also specify that this information sharing may be automated using computer
programs.
Measure
affects family assistance and child care payments
As noted in the Background section of this Bills Digest,
it is unclear why amendments are being made to family assistance law given that
Family Tax Benefit and Child Care Subsidy will not be affected by the new
income assessment method. The income tests for these payments consider
estimates of adjusted taxable income and entitlements are reconciled on an
annual basis when individuals submit their tax returns. There are existing
provisions in family assistance law which provide for this reconciliation
process using data from the ATO.[81]
The Government has not announced any new measure using tax
data for the purposes of Family Tax Benefit or Child Care Subsidy payments and
no explanation has been provided in the explanatory material for the Bill to
suggest why the new information sharing and computer-automated decision making
amendments need to be made to family assistance law. The Explanatory Memorandum
states only that ‘The Australian Government will use taxation information
(primarily data from the Single Touch Payroll system) to administer the family
assistance law’.[82]
Exchange of
taxation information
Item 74 inserts new section 161A to the FA
Admin Act to add two definitions:
- taxation
information is information held by a taxation officer, including
protected information as defined under subsection 355-30(1) in Schedule 1 of
the Taxation
Administration Act 1953 but excludes tax file numbers. This includes
information disclosed or obtained for the purposes of taxation law and which
identifies, or can be used to identify, an entity
- a taxation officer is defined under subsection 355-30(2) in Schedule
1 of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 or an entity covered by
section 355-15 in the same Schedule. A taxation officer is the Commissioner or
Second Commissioner of the ATO and public servants appointed or engaged by the
ATO. Other entities covered include those providing services to the ATO (and
their employees) or other individuals working for the Commonwealth who are
performing functions or exercising powers under the taxation law.
Item 78 inserts new section 162A into the FA
Admin Act which provides for the obtaining, recording, disclosure and use
of protected information relating to taxation information. The section allows
for the disclosure of protected information (under family assistance law) to a
taxation officer where it is for the purposes of matching that information
against taxation information in order to administer family assistance law. New
subsection 162A(3) authorises the collection of personal information for
the purposes of the Privacy
Act 1988 where it is taxation information collected from a taxation
officer for the purposes of family assistance law.
Existing offence provisions in the FA Admin Act
will cover the unauthorised access to or use of protected family assistance
information.
Computer-automated
decisions
Items 81 and 82 amend section 223 of the FA
Admin Act which provides for computer programs to make decisions.
Currently, section 223 provides for the Secretary (of the Department of Social
Services) to arrange for the use of computer programs for any purpose for which
the Secretary may make decisions under family assistance law and that such
decisions are taken to be a decision made by the Secretary.
Item 81 amends this section so that the Secretary may
arrange for the use of computer programs for any purposes for which the
Secretary or any other officer may make decisions. A decision is defined
at subsection 3(1) of the FA Admin Act as having the same meaning as in
the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal Act 1975, where it is defined to include the doing of
any act or thing.[83]
The amendments will allow for computer programs authorised by the Secretary to
be used for any purpose for which officers administering family assistance law
may make decisions.
The Explanatory Memorandum states that this amendment is
to address a possible argument that the existing provision limits the use of
computer programs to decisions that are specifically vested in the Secretary.[84]
The current information sharing provisions at section 162 of the FA Admin
Act provide for a person to make certain decisions relating to protected
information (not the Secretary specifically). The amendments will provide for
the use of computer programs in obtaining, recording, disclosing and using
protected information (and for any other decisions made by officers
administering family assistance law).
The Explanatory Memorandum states that ‘the amendments
made by these items are only intended to clarify that decisions under section
162 of the Family Assistance Administration Act to access or use protected
information are decisions under section 223’.[85]
However, the amendments are not limited to decisions under section 162 and provide
for any decisions made by officers under family assistance law to be automated
using computer programs. Item 82 inserts a note that decisions under
section 162 are examples of the kinds of decisions under section 223, but this
note by no means limits the operation of section 223 as amended.
The amendments made by item 81 (and the similar
amendment made by item 83 to the SS Admin Act) have broader
implications than the description offered in the Explanatory Memorandum
suggests.
Item 100 adds new section 351B to the Student
Assistance Act 1973 to allow for the use of computer programs for any
purposes for which an officer may make a decision under subsections 351(1) and
(2) of that Act. This provision specifically limits the use of computer
programs to decisions relating to the access and use of protected student
assistance information. The Explanatory Memorandum states that this provision
has a narrower operation than the equivalent provisions in the FA Admin Act
and SS Admin Act (as amended by items 81–84).[86]
If the intent of the amendments by items 81 and 83 to the FA Admin Act and
SS Admin Act is ‘only to clarify’ that decisions to access or use
protected information are decisions that can be made with the use of computer
programs, then the amendments could have been drafted in a similar way to the
amendments to the Student Assistance Act 1973.
Similar amendments to items 74 and 78, relating to the
sharing of taxation information and protected information, are made to the SS
Admin Act and the Student Assistance Act 1973.[87]
Schedule 1:
Part 3—Other amendments
Part 3 of Schedule 1 primarily makes consequential
amendments with the exception of item 116 which inserts new section
1072A to the SS Act to provide for the treatment of lump sum arrears
of periodic payments under the social security income test.
Section 1073 of the SS Act provides for lump sum
amounts that are not income in the form of periodic payments, or ordinary
income from remunerative work undertaken by a person or an exempt lump sum, to
be apportioned equally over the 52 weeks commencing on the day the person
becomes entitled to that amount.
New section 1072A will cover payments of arrears of
periodic payments which are not related to remunerative work, are not exempt
lump sums and are not compensation payments. The Explanatory Memorandum
provides examples of such payments including arrears of periodic payments under
an income protection insurance policy or defined benefit income stream arrears
(where the income stream was suspended for a period and then later resumed).[88]
Lump sums which fall into this category will be taken to be received over a
period determined by the Secretary beginning on the day the person receives the
lump sum and not exceeding a period of 52 weeks. The payment will be
apportioned equally to the number of days in the period.