Introductory Info
Date introduced: 26 February 2020
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Education
Commencement: Sections 1 to 3 on Royal Assent. Items 1–6 of Schedule 1 on 1 July 2021. Item 7 of Schedule 1 on 13 December 2019. Item 8 of Schedule 1 on 16 December 2019. Schedule 2 on the first Child Care Subsidy fortnight that begins after Royal Assent.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Family
Assistance Legislation Amendment (Improving Assistance for Vulnerable and
Disadvantaged Families) Bill 2020 (the Bill) is to amend the A New Tax System
(Family Assistance) Act 1999 (the FA Act) and the A New Tax System
(Family Assistance) (Administration) Act 1999 (the FA Admin Act)
to:
- make
it easier for child care providers and families to access the Additional Child
Care Subsidy (child wellbeing) which assists with the costs of child care for
children at risk of serious abuse or neglect
- change
how an individual whose relationship status changes during a financial year has
their adjusted taxable income assessed for the Child Care Subsidy (CCS)
reconciliation process which occurs at the end of the financial year and
- make
other technical amendments and corrections.
The amendments were not announced prior to the Bill being
introduced. The main changes affecting Additional Child Care Subsidy (child
wellbeing) will commence 1 July 2021. The changes to the CCS reconciliation
process will affect reviews of CCS entitlements paid in the 2019–20 financial
year onwards.
The amendments will result in a small net saving to the
government with costs to Services Australia to implement the changes estimated
at $22.3 million and changes to the CCS reconciliation process providing
savings of $24.0 million.[1]
Coronavirus
Economic Response Package Omnibus (Measures No. 2) Act 2020
The amendments proposed in Schedule 2 of the Bill, relating
to the reconciliation process for individuals whose relationship status changes
during a financial year, have subsequently been legislated under the Coronavirus
Economic Response Package Omnibus (Measures No. 2) Act 2020.[2]
The Coronavirus
Economic Response Package Omnibus (Measures No. 2) Bill 2020 was introduced
and passed by the Parliament on 8 April 2020.[3]
Accordingly the Bill will need to be amended to remove Schedule 2.
Structure of
the Bill and the Bills Digest
The Bill contains two schedules providing for distinct
changes to different components of the child care fee assistance system. The
Bills Digest provides general background to Australian Government funding of
child care and addresses the key issues and provisions of each schedule separately.
The Bills Digest contains analysis of the amendments in Schedule 2 despite the
amendments being subsequently enacted via the Coronavirus
Economic Response Package Omnibus (Measures No. 2) Act 2020.
Background
Australian Government funding for child care
The Australian Government provides child care fee
assistance to families and direct assistance to services to improve equity of
access to child care services, encourage and support the participation of women
in the workforce and improve the quality of early childhood education and care
(ECEC) in order to assist with children’s development.[4]
Pre-July 2018 fee assistance: Child Care Benefit and Child
Care Rebate
Prior to July 2018, the two main forms of fee assistance
were the Child Care Benefit and Child Care Rebate. These payments were paid to
families using approved child care services (services which met certain
eligibility requirements such as compliance with state and territory regulatory
requirements under the National Quality Framework).[5]
Child Care Benefit was means tested and rates were based on family income,
hours of care used, type of care used, and whether parents met the work,
training or study test.[6]
Child Care Benefit could be paid via a family’s child care provider as a fee
reduction, or as a lump sum paid to the family at the end of the financial
year.
Child Care Rebate was not means tested and covered 50 per
cent of out-of-pocket costs (after deducting Child Care Benefit) up to a
maximum amount per child per financial year. Child Care Rebate could also be
paid via providers as a fee reduction or directly to families (either
fortnightly or as an annual lump sum).[7]
Post-July 2018 fee assistance: Child Care Subsidy
From 2 July 2018, these two payments were merged into a
new payment known as the Child Care Subsidy (CCS).[8]
The CCS is means tested with rates of payment based on family income, hours of
care used, type of care used, and parents’ level of work, training or study. A
maximum hourly amount payable via the subsidy is set by the Government with
families receiving a percentage of this rate or a percentage of their child
care fees, based on the factors listed above. The payment is paid directly to
providers to be delivered to families in the form of a fee reduction.
The CCS can be paid for Centre Based Day Care, Outside
School Hours Care, Family Day Care and In Home Care but different rates of
assistance are offered depending on the kind(s) of care used.[9]
Child care services must meet certain conditions to be approved to pass on the
CCS; this includes any regulatory requirements set by state and territory
authorities under the National Quality Framework.
Additional Child Care Subsidy is a top-up payment
available to families in special circumstances (see section below).[10]
Direct support to providers
The Australian Government also provides direct support to
child care services to assist with the establishment and running costs of
services in areas where they may otherwise be unviable, for delivering services
to children with disability or other special needs, and to assist with
professional development.[11]
These supports are provided under the Department of Education’s
Community Child Care Fund program. The fund consists of different grant
categories—open competitive grants, restricted non-competitive grants (for
specified services, primarily those previously funded under the Budget Based
Funded program which provided assistance to Indigenous, regional and remote
services), the Connected Beginnings Program and special circumstances grants
(for services that have experienced a natural disaster or other unexpected
event).[12]
Temporary
funding changes in response to the COVID-19 pandemic
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Government
temporarily suspended the CCS funding arrangements from 6 April 2020.[13]
Under the new funding arrangements child care services will receive a weekly
‘business continuity payment’ equivalent to 50 per cent of fees charged (up to
the CCS hourly fee cap) for sessions of care in the fortnight proceeding 2
March 2020 (17 February 2020 to 28 February 2020). The
payment for vacation care services will be based on the first fortnight of
revenue in the school holidays between Term 3 and 4 of 2019.[14]
This will mean services can receive a payment worth up to half of their
pre-pandemic fee revenue.
The new system will be reviewed after one month and an
extension will be considered after three months.[15]
In order to be eligible for this new payment, a child
care service must:
- stay
open with at least one child actively enrolled (except where the service is
made to close on public health advice or for other health and safety reasons)
- not
charge families any fees
- continue
and prioritise care for children of essential workers, vulnerable and
disadvantaged children and previously enrolled children
- comply
with other regulatory requirements under the National Quality Framework and the
conditions for approval for the CCS.[16]
Some providers and their employees may be eligible for
JobKeeper Payment.[17]
In exceptional circumstances, providers may be able to apply for additional
funding under the new child care funding arrangements but this would be decided
on a case by case basis.[18]
Detailed information on the Child Care Subsidy
Child Care Subsidy
CCS eligibility
For a person to be eligible for the CCS, their child must:
- be
a ‘Family Tax
Benefit child’[19]
or ‘regular
care child’[20]—this
essentially means that the child must an Australian resident and in the adult’s
care for at least 14 per cent of the time
- be
13 or under and not attending secondary school and
- meet
immunisation requirements.[21]
The claimant, and/or their partner, must:
- meet
residency requirements and
- be
liable to pay for the child care provided by an approved provider.[22]
Some exemptions from these requirements can apply in
special circumstances. For example, Services Australia can waive the residency
requirements in certain circumstances.[23]
Activity test
The activity test determines how many hours of child care
a claimant can receive CCS for. This depends on how much time a single parent
or both partners in a couple/two-parent family undertake recognised activities:
these include paid work, study, training or volunteering.[24]
For couple/two-parent families, the maximum number of hours of subsidised care
a person can receive is calculated using the person with the lowest level of
activity. See Table 1 for a breakdown.
Table 1: Child Care Subsidy Activity test
Hours of recognised activity (per fortnight) |
Maximum number of hours of CCS (per fortnight) |
8 hours to 16 hours |
36 hours |
More than 16 hours to 48 hours |
72 hours |
More than 48 hours |
100 hours |
Source: Department of Social Services (DSS), ‘3.5.2.10 CCS
– activity test – general’, Family assistance guide, DSS website, last
reviewed 20 March 2020.
Families that earn $68,163 or less in 2019–20 and do fewer
than eight hours of recognised activities in a fortnight are able to access 24
hours of subsidised care per fortnight.[25]
Families that do not meet the activity test and have a child/children attending
a preschool program provided by a centre-based Long Day Care centre are able to
access 36 hours of subsidised care (however, this only applies to the child
attending the preschool program).[26]
A range of other exemptions are available for families in
certain circumstances (such as disability or care requirements).[27]
Income test
The activity test determines for how many hours of care a
person is eligible to receive the CCS. The income test determines the rate of
CCS a person will receive for the hours they are eligible under the activity
test. The CCS will pay a percentage of the child care fee or a percentage of
the hourly ‘rate cap’, whichever is lower. The income test determines the
percentage paid. The current hourly rate caps are set out in Table 2.
Table 2: Child Care Subsidy hourly rate caps
Type of child care |
Hourly rate cap |
Centre Based Day Care—long
day care and occasional care |
$11.98 (for below
school-aged children) |
Family Day Care |
$11.10 |
Outside School Hours Care—before
and after school, and vacation care |
$10.48 (for school-aged
children) |
In Home Care - per family |
$32.58 |
Source: DSS, ‘3.5.3 CCS –
hourly rate caps’, Family assistance guide, DSS website, last
reviewed 1 July 2019.
The income test assesses the combined adjusted taxable
income of the family. Adjusted taxable income is the sum of taxable income,
adjusted fringe benefits, target foreign income, net investment losses, tax
free pensions or benefits and reportable superannuation contributions less any
child maintenance expenditure.[28]
Table 3 shows the applicable percentage by income range for 2019–20. These
amounts are adjusted based on movements in the Consumer Price Index on 1 July
of each year.[29]
Table 3: Child Care Subsidy income test
Combined annual adjusted taxable income |
Applicable CCS percentage of the actual fee charged or
the relevant hourly rate cap (whichever is lower) |
Equal to or below $68,163 |
85% |
Above $68,163 and below $173,163 |
Decreasing from 85% to 50% Subsidy decreases by 1% for each $3,000 of family income |
Equal to or above $173,163 and below $252,453 |
50% |
Equal to or above $252,453 and below $342,453 |
Decreasing from 50% to 20% Subsidy decreases by 1% for each $3,000 of family income |
Equal to or above $342,453 and below $352,453 |
20% |
Equal to or above $352,453 |
0% |
Source: DSS, ‘3.5.1 CCS – combined annual ATI’, Family assistance guide, DSS website,
last reviewed 1 July 2019.
Annual cap
If a family earns more than $188,163 per year (and less
than $352,453) then the total amount of CCS they can receive in 2019–20 is $10,373
per child.[30]
Families earning less than $188,163 per year do not face a cap. Families
earning over $352,453 cannot receive any CCS under the income test.
Additional
Child Care Subsidy
Additional Child Care Subsidy (ACCS) provides targeted
assistance to families/children facing barriers to accessing child care.[31]
There are four categories of the ACCS:
- child
wellbeing—aimed primarily at children at risk of abuse or neglect
- grandparent—for
grandparent carers who receive income support (such as a pension) and who are
the principal carer of children
- temporary
financial hardship—for those experiencing significant financial stress due to
exceptional circumstances and
- transition
to work—for those receiving certain income support payments such as Parenting
Payment, Newstart Allowance or Disability Support Pension and who have a Job
Plan (employment pathway plan) in effect.[32]
The child wellbeing, grandparent and temporary financial
hardship categories of ACCS allow eligible families to receive a subsidy equal
to the actual fee charged by their child care service (up to 120 per cent of
the hourly rate cap—see Table 1 above) for up to 100 hours per fortnight and be
exempt from the activity test. The transition to work category provides a
subsidy equal to 95 per cent of the actual fee charged (up to 95 per cent
of the hourly rate cap) with subsidised hours determined by the activity test.[33]
Committee
consideration
Senate
Standing Committee for the Selection of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Selection of Bills recommended
the Bill not be referred to a committee.[34]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
raised concerns with the retrospective application of certain amendments in
Schedules 1 and 2.[35]
The Committee sought further advice from the Minister for Education as to why
the retrospective application was necessary and justified. At the time of
writing, the Committee does not appear to have received a response from the
Minister.[36]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
At the time of writing, non-government parties and independents
had not commented on the Bill.
Position of
major interest groups
At the time of writing, major stakeholder groups had not
commented on the Bill.
Financial
implications
According to the Explanatory Memorandum, information
technology implementation of the proposed amendments will cost $22.3 million
over the period 2019–20 to 2023–24. The amendments in Schedule 2 will provide
savings of $24.0 million over the forward estimates (2019–20 to 2022–23). The
Explanatory Memorandum does not provide an estimate for the net fiscal impact
of the proposed amendments over the forward estimates.[37]
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.[38]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights had no
comment on the Bill.[39]
Key issues
and provisions
Schedule 1—ACCS
(child wellbeing) and technical amendments
Schedule 1 of the Bill proposes a number of amendments to
improve access to ACCS (child wellbeing) for providers and families.
ACCS (child wellbeing) is paid in respect of children
considered at risk of serious abuse or neglect and provides a subsidy equal to
the actual fee charged by a child care service (up to 120 per cent of the
hourly rate cap) for up to 100 hours per fortnight. Individuals eligible for
ACCS—child wellbeing are exempt from the activity test.[40]
There was a marked increase in the number of children for
whom ACCS (child wellbeing) was paid over the first year of the new child care fee
assistance system (Table 4 and Figure 1). This is also a significant increase
compared to the number of children accessing the previous fee assistance
payment aimed at children at risk of abuse and neglect: Special Child Care
Benefit—child at risk (note that the payments are not directly comparable due
to different policy settings). In response to questions on the reason for the
increase in recipients, the Department of Education cited its promotion of ACCS
(child wellbeing) and specific eligibility criteria allowing for foster carers
to access the payment.[41]
Table 4:
Special Child Care Benefit-child at risk and Additional Child Care Subsidy
(child wellbeing) recipients, September 2017–September 2019
Special Child Care Benefit—child at risk
|
Date
|
Children
|
Families
|
September 2017
|
8,820
|
5,800
|
December 2017
|
8,920
|
5,870
|
March 2018
|
8,530
|
5,600
|
June 2018
|
8,220
|
5,460
|
Additional Child
Care Subsidy (child wellbeing)
|
Date
|
Children
|
Families
|
September 2018
|
9,140
|
6,070
|
December 2018
|
11,140
|
7,490
|
March 2019
|
12,510
|
8,390
|
June 2019
|
14,070
|
9,710
|
September 2019
|
16,610
|
11,360
|
Sources: September 2017–June 2018 data from Senate Education
and Employment Legislation Committee, Answers to Questions on Notice, Education
Portfolio, Supplementary Budget Estimates 2019–20, 24 October 2019, Question
no. SQ19-000478; September 2018–September 2019 from Department of
Education, Skills and Employment (DESE), ‘Child
care data for September quarter 2019’ DESE, Canberra, December 2019.
Figure 1:
Special Child Care Benefit (SCCB)—child at risk and Additional Child Care
Subsidy (ACCS) (child wellbeing) recipients, September 2017–September 2019
Sources: September 2017–June 2018 data from Senate Education
and Employment Legislation Committee, Answers to Questions on Notice, Education
Portfolio, Supplementary Budget Estimates 2019–20, 24 October 2019, Question
no. SQ19-000478; September 2018–September 2019 from Department of
Education, Skills and Employment (DESE), ‘Child care in
Australia’ quarterly reports, DESE website.
Eligibility for ACCS (child wellbeing)
Individual
eligibility
An individual (such as a parent or carer) is eligible for
ACCS (child wellbeing) where they are eligible for CCS for that session of care
and:
- either
a certificate has been given under section 85CB of the FA Act, or a
determination made by the Secretary under section 85CE is in effect and
- none
of the limitations to eligibility for the ACCS (child wellbeing) under Division
5 of Part 4A of the FA Act applies.[42]
A certificate under section 85CB of the FA Act is
made by a child care provider where it considers that a child is at serious
risk of abuse or neglect. Currently, a provider cannot issue a certificate
where it would mean that:
- in
any period of 12 months, certificates given by the provider for the same child
at the same service would be in effect for more than six weeks[43]
or
- during
the first week the certificate applies, the total number of children accessing
ACCS (child wellbeing) at the child care service is more than 50 per cent of
the total number of children being cared for by the service (known as the ‘50
per cent rule’).[44]
Where a provider is unable to issue a certificate because
of the time limit or the 50 per cent rule, the provider may apply to Services
Australia to make a determination under section 85CE that a child is at risk of
serious abuse or neglect so that ACCS (child wellbeing) is therefore payable in
respect of that child’s sessions of care.[45]
Applications for an ongoing increase in the percentage (above 50 per cent) can
also be made by a child care provider—such applications are made to the
Department of Education, Skills and Employment.[46]
The Department of Education, Skills and Employment may, at
any time, increase or decrease the percentage limit that applies to a
particular service, based on evidence previously submitted by the provider or
compliance data analysis.[47]
The Secretary may also prescribe a different percentage to apply across the
board.[48]
Certificates issued by a provider under section 85CB must
specify the day that it takes effect. Paragraph 85CB(2)(c) specifies that this
must be a Monday of a week that includes a day where the child was considered
at risk of serious abuse or neglect, and that the commencement day cannot be
more than 28 days before the day the certificate is issued.
As a result of amendments made by the Family Assistance
Legislation Amendment (Building on the Child Care Package) Act 2019,
commencing on 13 July 2020, the 50 per cent rule will no longer apply.[49]
The amendments will only limit the number of certificates that can be issued by
a provider when the Secretary of the Department of Education, Skills and
Employment has determined a particular percentage should apply to a particular
service. If the Secretary has not made such a determination, then providers are
not limited in the percentage of ACCS (child wellbeing) certificates they can
issue.
Provider
eligibility
A provider is eligible for ACCS (child wellbeing) for a
session of care which is delivered by the provider where:
- a
certificate has been given under section 85CB of the FA Act, or a
determination made by the Secretary under section 85CE is in effect—that is, the
provider has given the Secretary a certificate stating the child is or was at
risk of serious abuse or neglect or the Secretary has otherwise determined this
to be the case
- the
provider is not able to identify an individual who is eligible for CCS for the
session of care
- the
child meets the age and immunisation requirements for CCS and
- none
of the limitations to eligibility for the ACCS (child wellbeing) under Division
5 of Part 4A of the FA Act applies.[50]
Proposed
changes
Schedule 1 of the Bill makes a number of amendments to
make the ACCS (child wellbeing) easier to access. The Explanatory Memorandum
states that these amendments are intended to ‘address feedback’ from the child
care sector.[51]
The proposed changes include:
- allowing
providers to be considered eligible for ACCS (child wellbeing) in respect of a
child who is considered part of a class prescribed in the Minister’s Rules,
including children in foster care arrangements
- extending
the period that ACCS (child wellbeing) certificates can be backdated from a
maximum of 28 days to 13 weeks as prescribed by the Minister’s Rules and
- extending
the maximum period for an ACCS (child wellbeing) determination from 13 weeks to
up to 12 months for classes of children prescribed in the Minister’s Rules.[52]
The changes will commence from 1 July 2021.[53]
Provider
eligibility for ACCS (child wellbeing)
This measure will allow for a provider to be considered
eligible for ACCS (child wellbeing) in respect of a child who is considered
part of a class prescribed in the Minister’s Rules. The Explanatory Memorandum
states that it is expected that this class will include children in formal
foster care arrangements.[54]
As described above, currently, in order to be eligible to
claim ACCS (child wellbeing) in respect of a child, the provider must not be
able identify an individual who is eligible for CCS in respect of that session
of care. The proposed amendments will remove this requirement where the child
is a member of a class prescribed by the Minister’s Rules.
The intent of the amendment is to ensure providers can
care for a child at risk of abuse or neglect while a foster family determines
its eligibility for CCS (and potentially ACCS).[55]
That is, currently providers might be able to identify a foster family as
eligible for CCS but the foster family may not have had time to establish or
claim its entitlement. The amendment will enable a continuity of care for these
children where they may be transitioning to or between different out of home
care arrangements.
Item 1 of Schedule 1 repeals paragraph 85CA(2)(b)
and inserts new paragraphs 85CA(2)(b) and (ba) to provide that in order
for a child care provider to be eligible for ACCS (child wellbeing) in respect
of a session of care for a child, the provider:
- must
be not able to identify an individual who is eligible for CCS for the session
of care or
- the
child must be a member of class prescribed by the Minister’s Rules.
The existing age and immunisation requirements will
continue to apply to the child but will be set out in new paragraph
85CA(2)(ba).
Backdating
of ACCS (child wellbeing) certificates/determinations
These amendments will allow for the backdating of ACCS
(child wellbeing) certificates and determinations from the current maximum of
28 days to up to 13 weeks in certain circumstances. The circumstances are to be
set out in the Minister’s Rules. The amendments will enable backdating of
payments in situations where a provider has identified a child as at risk but
it takes longer than 28 days to provide a certificate.
Item 3 of Schedule 1 inserts new subsection
85CB(2A) which allows for the Secretary to extend the 28 day period
backdating limit for a certificate given under section 85CB if the Secretary is
satisfied that exceptional circumstances prescribed by the Minister’s Rules
exist. The extension can be to a maximum period of 13 weeks.
Item 5 inserts new subsections 85CE(5A), (5B)
and (5C)—section 85CE deals with determinations for ACCS (child wellbeing) made
by Services Australia or the Secretary of the Department of Education, Skills
and Employment because of the 12 month or 50 per cent rule.[56]
New subsection 5B provides for the Secretary to extend the 28 day
backdating limit for a determination made under section 85CE to a period of no
more than 13 weeks where the Secretary is satisfied that exceptional
circumstances set out in the Minister’s Rules exist.
The Explanatory Memorandum states that ‘the exceptional
circumstances are anticipated to be circumstances which are outside the
provider’s control and made it impractical for the provider to provide the
certificate or apply for a determination within the required timeframes’.[57]
Extension of
maximum ACCS (child wellbeing) determination period
These amendments will extend the maximum period for an
ACCS (child wellbeing) determination period from 13 weeks to up to 12 months
for classes of children to be prescribed in the Minister’s Rules. The
Explanatory Memorandum states that it is expected that this class will include
children on long term child protection orders and those in formal foster care.[58]
This is intended to reduce the administrative burden on families, providers and
state and territory child protection agencies which currently have to apply for
an extension to a determination every 13 weeks.
New subsection 85CE(5C) inserted by item 5,
provides for the Secretary to extend an ACCS (child wellbeing) determination
made under section 85CE from 13 weeks duration to up to 12 months, if the
Secretary is satisfied that circumstances prescribed by the Minister’s Rules
apply in relation to the child.
Other
amendments
Items 7 and 8 clarify and correct two amendments to
the FA Admin Act made by the Family Assistance
Legislation Amendment (Building on the Child Care Package) Act 2019.
Schedule 2—Review
of certain CCS decisions
Background
Schedule 2 proposes to amend the FA Admin Act to
change how adjusted taxable income is assessed during the CCS reconciliation
process at the end of the financial year. However, the amendments proposed in
Schedule 2 of the Bill have already been enacted under the Coronavirus
Economic Response Package Omnibus (Measures No. 2) Act 2020 and the
Bill will need to be amended to remove Schedule 2.[59]
The Coronavirus
Economic Response Package Omnibus (Measures No. 2) Bill 2020 was introduced
and passed by the Parliament on 8 April 2020.[60]
For completeness, this Bills Digest provides an analysis
of Schedule 2 to the Bill.
Income test
treatment of couples
The basic components of the CCS income test are described
in the ‘Background’ section.
Under clause 3AA of Schedule 3 of the FA Act, both
members of a couple’s adjusted taxable income are assessed for the purposes of
working out a CCS entitlement. Where an individual is considered to be a member
of a couple for only part of a year, the partner’s income that is added to the
CCS claimant’s adjusted taxable income is equivalent to the proportion of the
fortnights in the financial year where they were both a couple and entitled to
CCS or ACCS.
For example, if an individual claiming CCS (P1) was in a relationship
with another person (P2) for 12 weeks in a particular financial year, and CCS
was claimed for 10 of those weeks, then 19.2% of P2’s annual income would be
included in the calculation of the CCS entitlement (which is worked out on an
annual basis but converted to a fortnightly amount).
Prior to amendments made by the Family Assistance
Legislation Amendment (Building on the Child Care Package) Act 2019,
the income test apportioned income for all the fortnights in a financial year
in which P1 and P2 were a member of a couple, irrespective of whether CCS was
being claimed for those fortnights.[61]
Reconciliation
The reconciliation process is a review of a person’s CCS
entitlement undertaken by the Secretary of the Department of Education, Skills
and Employment through Services Australia.[62]
At the end of the financial year, a person’s CCS
entitlement is reconciled through a process that compares the estimates of
their adjusted taxable income during the financial year with their actual
adjusted taxable income as assessed using the information submitted in their
tax return.[63]
Where a person is not required to submit a tax return then they must notify
Services Australia of their actual adjusted taxable income for the year
(Services Australia will be able to verify data on any income support received—such
as a pension or allowance).[64]
The reconciliation process also assesses the session reports provided by child
care providers.[65]
The reconciliation process determines whether the
individual received an accurate CCS payment, an overpayment or an underpayment.
In cases of an overpayment, a debt will be raised (which can be recovered
through reductions in future CCS payment). In cases of underpayment, a person
will receive a lump sum payment to correct the entitlement.[66]
During the financial year, an individual’s fortnightly CCS
payment will have five per cent withheld. This amount can be used to offset any
debts that arise from the reconciliation process at the end of the year or will
be paid as a lump sum to the individual.[67]
Proposed
changes
The Bill does not propose amendments to the way
entitlements are assessed and calculated during the financial year, only for
the reconciliation process at the end of the year.[68]
Schedule 2 makes the following changes to how CCS rates
are to be calculated in the reconciliation process for those who are a member
of a couple for only part of a financial year:
- the
current process for assessing partner income under clause 3AA of Schedule 3 to
the FA Act will be ignored for the purposes of the reconciliation
process
- CCS
entitlements in the financial year under review will be assessed for each
fortnight. Where a person is a member of a couple at the beginning of that
fortnight then the partner’s adjusted taxable income will be included for the
purposes of calculating the CCS rate for that fortnight (annual rate is
calculated and converted to a fortnightly rate)
- where
the annual cap is determined to apply for a fortnight in which a person is a
member of a couple, then whether the annual cap has been reached will be worked
out by adding:
- the
CCS amounts the individual has been entitled to for a particular child in the
fortnights starting that financial year and
- any
CCS their partner has been entitled to for the same child in the fortnights in
that financial year they have been members of a couple.
Currently, under paragraph 1(3)(b) of Schedule 2 to the FA
Act, CCS paid to the person’s partner is only included in determining
whether the CCS rate cap has been reached where they have been a member of a
couple for the whole of the financial year.
Impact of
the changes
The effect of these amendments is that the CCS rate
calculation process in Schedule 3 of the FA Act will assess part-year partner
income in one way (the percentage of their income equivalent to the percentage
of CCS fortnights they are a member of the couple). This will be different from
the calculation used in the reconciliation process (each CCS fortnight they are
in a couple relationship will include the partner’s annual income to calculate
an annual rate that is then converted to a fortnightly rate). The
reconciliation process will determine the actual entitlement for the financial
year.
The proposed way of assessing income for the
reconciliation process is similar to that used normally for Family Tax Benefit.
The Family Tax Benefit income test (also set out in the FA Act) allows
for rates to be calculated based on the person’s circumstances in each relevant
fortnightly period.[69]
The CCS, despite using the same income test definitions, income estimates and
reconciliation processes as Family Tax Benefit, adopted a very different
approach to considering the income of partners where circumstances had changed
during the year. The Bills Digest for the legislation that introduced the CCS
flagged the design of this part of the CCS income test as an issue stating:
As CCS is to be worked out on a fortnightly basis, it appears
this provision has been included to allow for couple rates to be calculated
based on the fortnights a couple was together in a relationship. This is
different from other family assistance payments where rates are calculated on
an annual basis divided into a daily rate. For these payments, where
circumstances change during the year such as a person entering a couple
relationship, a different rate is calculated based on the relevant period where
the circumstances are changed (a new annual rate is calculated and a new daily
rate determined).[70]
The Bill shifts the assessment of income for CCS
reconciliations purposes more in line with Family Tax Benefit but does not change
the assessment of partner income for CCS instalments made throughout the year.
It is unclear why inconsistent assessment processes will apply and what impact
this will have on reconciliation outcomes.
The amendments relating to the CCS annual cap calculation
ensure more accurate assessments are made as to whether CCS paid in respect of
a particular child has reached any annual cap, regardless of which parent/carer
claimed the CCS.
The Explanatory Memorandum states the intended effect of
the proposed amendments primarily relate to how the annual cap is applied
during the reconciliation process.[71]
The annual cap will not apply in fortnights where the individual is single and
their own income is under the annual cap income threshold, regardless of
whether the annual cap applies in other fortnights as a result of a partner’s
income being included in those other fortnights.
No information has been provided in the explanatory
materials as to how many families are expected to be affected by the amendment.
Provisions
Section 105E of the FA Admin Act sets out the
conditions for the Secretary to undertake a review of an individual’s CCS
entitlement (the reconciliation process). Item 1 of Schedule 2 inserts new
subsections 105E(4)–(7) to the FA Admin Act.
New subsection 105E(4) provides for new subsections
105E(5) and (6) to apply to the review of an individual’s CCS entitlement where
the individual has been a member of couple on one or more, but not all, of the
first Mondays in any CCS fortnights in the financial year under review.
New subsection 105E(5) mandates that the Secretary
must review the individual’s CCS entitlement for each fortnight in the
financial year as if provisions for assessing the adjusted taxable income of
members of a couple set out in paragraph 3AA(2)(b) of Schedule 3 of the FA
Act had not been enacted. This paragraph sets out how the adjusted taxable
income of the partner of the CCS claimant, where they have not been a couple
for the entire year, should be apportioned to the fortnights they were both a
couple and CCS was claimed.
New subsection 105E(6) provides that for each
fortnight the individual is a member of a couple on the first Monday in a CCS
fortnight in the financial year, their CCS rate should be worked out:
- as
if the individual’s adjusted taxable income for the year included their
partner’s adjusted taxable income and
- in
determining whether the annual CCS cap has been reached, any CCS paid to their
partner in respect of the same child during fortnights they were a couple
should be added to any CCS previously paid to the individual for the same
child.
Item 2 is an application provision. The amendments
made by item 1 are to apply for reviews of CCS entitlements starting in the
2019–20 income year and later income years. While the review process occurs at
the end of the financial year, payments for the 2019–20 income year have
already been made and the amendments affect the reconciliation process for
those payments. As noted above, the Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny
of Bills raised concerns about the retrospective application of the amendments
in Schedule 2.[72]