Introductory Info
Date introduced: 24 June 2021
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Social Services
Commencement: Part 1 of Schedule 1, Schedule 2 and Schedule 3 commence on 1 January 2022 if the Act receives Royal Assent on or before 3 December 2021; otherwise on the first 1 January or 1 July to occur after one month beginning on the day of Royal Assent. The commencement of Part 2 of Schedule 1 is dependent on the date of commencement of Schedule 1 to the Social Security Legislation Amendment (Streamlined Participation Requirements and Other Measures) Bill 2021, if enacted.
The Bills Digest at a glance
- The
Social Services Legislation Amendment (Consistent Waiting Periods for New
Migrants) Bill 2021 (the Bill) seeks to deliver net savings of $672 million
over five years from 2020–21 to 2024–25 by applying a four-year (208 week)
waiting period for newly arrived migrants to access a number of payments where a
Newly Arrived Resident’s Waiting Period (NARWP) either does not apply or is
currently shorter than four years (set out in Table 1).
Table 1: proposed
changes to newly arrived resident’s waiting periods
Payment |
Proposed changes to NARWPs |
From |
To |
Carer Payment |
104 weeks |
208 weeks |
Carer Allowance |
52 weeks |
208 weeks |
Family Tax Benefit Part A |
52 weeks |
208 weeks |
Family Tax Benefit Part B |
None |
208 weeks |
Parental Leave Pay |
104 weeks |
208 weeks |
Dad and Partner Pay |
104 weeks |
208 weeks |
- Similar
measures were first announced as part of the 2018–19 Budget. With the
‘Encouraging Self-Sufficiency for Newly Arrived Migrants — extension’ budget measure
the Turnbull Coalition Government sought to apply a consistent four-year
waiting period to most Australian Government payments and concession cards.
- During
negotiations over legislation for this budget measure in 2018, the Government
made a number of concessions. These were included in the Social Services and
Other Legislation Amendment (Promoting Sustainable Welfare) Act 2018.
- The
measures proposed in the Bill were announced in the 2021–22 Budget.
- Opponents
of extensions to the NARWP argue that it exposes newly arrived residents and
their children to a risk of hardship. Supporters argue that it is fair and
reasonable to expect new migrants to support themselves and their children when
they arrive.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Social Services Legislation Amendment
(Consistent Waiting Periods for New Migrants) Bill 2021 (the Bill) is to amend
the Social
Security Act 1991 (the SS Act), the Social Security
(International Agreements) Act 1999, the A New Tax System
(Family Assistance) Act 1999 (the FA Act) and the Paid Parental Leave
Act 2010 (the PPL Act) to:
- extend
the Newly Arrived Resident’s Waiting Period (NARWP) from two years (104 weeks)
to four years (208 weeks) for Carer Payment, Parental Leave Pay (PLP) and Dad
and Partner Pay (DaPP)
- extend
the NARWP from one year (52 weeks) to four years (208 weeks) for Carer Allowance
and Family Tax Benefit (FTB) Part A
- introduce
a NARWP of four years (208 weeks) for FTB Part B
- extend
the NARWP from two years (104 weeks) to four years (208 weeks) for the Low
Income Health Care Card and Commonwealth Seniors Health Card and
- remove
the redundant two year (104 week) qualifying residence period for Parenting
Payment and make a number of other minor technical and consequential amendments.
If the Bill passes Parliament and receives Royal Assent
before 3 December 2021, the changes will apply from 1 January 2022 and affect
new permanent residents and some temporary visa holders. If the Bill is not
passed prior to 3 December 2021, the measures will take effect on the first 1 January
or 1 July to occur after one month from Royal Assent.
Structure of
the Bills Digest
The first sections of this Bills Digest provide summary information
on Parliamentary committee consideration of the Bill, financial implications
and the Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights.
The Bills Digest then provides background information on
residency requirements and waiting periods for new migrants, followed by
consideration of the Bill’s key issues and provisions, and the positions of
non-government parties and interest groups.
Committee consideration
The Bill has been referred to the Senate Community Affairs
Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 14 September 2021. Details of
the inquiry are at the inquiry
homepage.[1]
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
has no comment on the Bill.[2]
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights did not reach a firm
conclusion on the Bill stating that further information is required.[3]
Financial
implications
According to the Explanatory Memorandum, the changes in
the Bill are expected to result in total net savings of around $672 million
over five years from 2020–21 to 2024–25.[4]
Table 2 sets out the savings anticipated from each
Schedule, showing that the changes to FTB NARWPs will have the most significant
fiscal impact.
Table 2:
financial impact of each Schedule to the Bill
Measure |
Savings over
the forward estimates (DSS administered savings only) |
Schedule 1—Social security amendments |
$64.9 m |
Schedule 2—Family assistance amendment |
$515.5 m |
Schedule 3—Paid parental leave amendments |
$71.9 m |
Source: Explanatory
Memorandum, Social Services Legislation Amendment (Consistent Waiting
Periods for New Migrants) Bill 2021, p. 5.
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.[5]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights did not
reach a firm conclusion on whether the Bill is compatible with Australia’s
human rights obligations and has sought more information from the Minister.[6]
The Committee noted that the measure engages and limits
the rights to social security, adequate standard of living, health, maternity
leave and equality and non-discrimination as well as the rights of the child.
It raised questions relating to whether the measure’s limitation of these
rights was in pursuit of a legitimate objective and was proportional:
The committee considers the objectives of ensuring a
financially sustainable social security system and targeting those most in need
may be capable of constituting legitimate objectives, although some questions
remain as to whether this measure would, in practice, promote general welfare
for the purpose of international human rights law. Regarding proportionality,
the committee notes that while the measure appears to be accompanied by an
important safeguard, notably the broad range of exemptions to the waiting
period, questions remain as to whether this safeguard is sufficient in practice
and whether there are less rights restrictive alternatives.[7]
Background
Income support payments are generally restricted to
permanent residents and Australian citizens who are residing permanently in
Australia. In addition, most of those who arrive as permanent migrants are not able
to claim income support payments straight away. There are two ways the government
delays access to payments:
- qualifying
residence requirements—to qualify for payment, most claimants for the Age
Pension and Disability Support Pensions must have resided in Australia for at
least ten years with at least one consecutive period of five years or more.[8]
The other example is the Parenting Payment which has a shorter two-year (104
weeks) qualifying residence requirement[9]
- NARWP—a
waiting period is applied to qualified claimants for income support payments. The
NARWP applies to people without a minimum period of residence in Australia. This
minimum varies by payment.[10]
The rules for NARWPs are complicated. Australian citizens
are exempt, as are refugees and former refugees. There are a number of other
exemptions which can vary by visa category, with some applying to particular
payments (such as Special Benefit).[11]
To add an extra layer of complexity, the rules have changed over time and migrants
who were granted a visa before the change may be eligible for payment under the
old rules.[12]
Another tool the Australian Government uses is the Assurance
of Support scheme. Under the scheme Australian residents make a legally binding
commitment to cover the cost of certain social security payments paid to
migrants for a period after the migrant’s arrival. An Assurance of Support
period can be 12 months, two years or ten years.[13]
The Department of Home Affairs requires an Assurance of Support for some visa
types.
Rationale
for the NARWP
In a 2010 paper, Australian legal academic Ben Saul
outlined the thinking behind the NARWP:
Conceptually the waiting periods rest upon a political
judgment that ‘new’ members of the Australian community naturally possess a
lesser entitlement to social security than more ‘settled’ members of the
community. That judgment in turn rests upon a set of additional assumptions: 1)
that ‘full’ membership of the community is ‘earned’ over time, rather than
immediately enjoyed; 2) that new members are expected to make positive economic
contributions before they are a ‘drain’ on the system; 3) that the immediate
costs of resettlement should be borne by the migrant rather than by the
Australian community; and 4) that waiting periods remove the incentive to
migrate in order to receive welfare benefits.[14]
Opponents of policies such as the NARWP sometimes refer to
the approach as ‘welfare chauvinism’.[15]
Welfare chauvinism has been defined as ‘the opinion that immigrants are less
entitled to welfare benefits and services than the native population’.[16]
Some supporters of these kinds of policies have argued
that they enable governments to maintain public support for high levels of
immigration. In the United States, classical liberal advocates of open
immigration policies have sometimes argued that popular resistance can be
defused by ‘building a wall around the welfare state, not around the country’.[17]
In Australia, Chris Berg of the Institute of Public Affairs argued that
Australia’s NARWP embodies this approach and could help enable a more liberal
approach to immigration.[18]
However, some supporters of the NARWP also favour a more restricted immigration
intake.[19]
Payments and
cards with a NARWP
Since 1 January 2019, almost all Australian Government
payments have either a qualifying residence requirement or a NARWP. An
exception is Family Tax Benefit Part B (the current Bill seeks to change this).[20]
As shown in Table 3, NARWPs vary from one year (52 weeks)
to four years (208 weeks). The Bill seeks to apply a single waiting period of
four years (208 weeks) to all payments.
Table 3:
Australian Government payments with NARWPs by duration
52 weeks |
104 weeks |
208 weeks |
Carer Allowance |
Carer Payment |
JobSeeker
Payment |
Family Tax
Benefit Part A |
Parental Leave Pay |
Youth Allowance |
|
Dad and Partner Pay |
Parenting
Payment |
|
|
Special Benefit |
|
|
Austudy |
|
|
Mobility
Allowance |
|
|
Pensioner
Education Supplement |
|
|
Farm Household
Allowance |
|
|
Commonwealth
Seniors Health Card |
|
|
Low Income Health Care Card |
Source: Services Australia (SA), A
guide to Australian Government payments 1 July 2021 to 19 September 2021,
SA, Canberra, 2021.
Exemptions
from the NARWP
Some newly arrived migrants are exempt from the NARWP.
These include:
- Australian citizens
- refugees or former refugees
- family members of refugees or humanitarian migrants (where the person is still a family member when they claim, or where the refugee has died, the person was a family member immediately before the refugee's death).[21]
There are a number of other exemptions that apply to
specific payments. These are shown in Appendix A.
A newly arrived migrant can also be exempt from the NARWP
for Special Benefit and the Low Income Health Care Card if they have
experienced a substantial change in circumstance beyond their control since the
start of the NARWP, and are in financial hardship.[22]
New Zealand
citizens
Generally, temporary visa holders are not affected by the
NARWP because they are not eligible for social security or family payments. An
exception to this is any New Zealand citizen who holds a Special Category visa
(SCV).
New Zealand citizens with a valid New Zealand passport do
not need to apply for a visa before coming to Australia. Those who are eligible
are issued a temporary visa — the SCV subclass 444.[23]
This visa allows the person to remain in Australia indefinitely and has no work
restrictions.
Special social security rules apply to New Zealand
citizens who enter Australia on a SCV. The rules that apply depend on when the
person arrived in Australia.
Up until 26 February 2001, the SS Act treated SCV
holders as permanent residents. However, after 26 February 2001, the social
security rules for SCV holders changed and most SCV holders arriving after this
date were no longer treated as permanent residents.[24]
SCV holders who resided in Australia prior to the change
are still treated as permanent residents. These SCV holders are known as
protected SCV holders.[25]
Protected SCV holders are eligible for the same range of payments as Australian
citizens and holders of permanent visas.
Protected SCV holders are subject to a two-year (104 week)
NARWP for working age payments (such as JobSeeker Payment), Carer Payment, Low
Income Health Care Card and Commonwealth Seniors Health Care Card. They are not
subject to a NARWP for Carer Allowance, Family Tax Benefit Part A, Parental
Leave Pay, Dad and Partner Pay or Parenting Payment.[26]
Other SCV holders (non-protected SCV holders) are not
treated as permanent residents and have limited access to benefits.[27]
Non-protected SCV holders are eligible for Special Benefit, the Low Income
Health Care Card, Commonwealth Seniors Health Card, FTB-A, FTB-B, PLP and DaPP.
Non-protected SCV holders are subject to a two-year (104
week) NARWP for the Low Income Health Care Card and Commonwealth Seniors Health
Care Card. They are not subject to a NARWP for FTB-A, PLP and DaPP.[28]
Non-protected SCV holders who have lived in Australia for
a continuous period of at least ten years since 26 February 2001 can access a
once-only payment of JobSeeker Payment or Youth Allowance for a maximum
continuous period of six months.[29]
The six-month period does not start until any relevant waiting and/or
preclusion/exclusion periods have been served and payments commence. Transfer
between payments is not permitted under this residence exemption.[30]
History
Up until the early 1990s, permanent migrants were subject
to qualifying residence periods for pensions but no waiting periods for social
security benefits such as unemployment and sickness benefits. In 1975 the
Henderson Commission of Inquiry into Poverty recommended that pensions
should be available to all permanent residents.[31]
Proposals to restrict new migrants’
access to income support emerged in the late 1980s.[32]
During this period public support for immigration declined with surveys showing
an increasing proportion of survey respondents saying the Government was
allowing too many migrants.[33]
Opposition to immigration levels reached a peak during the
recession of the early 1990s.[34]
The 1988 FitzGerald Report on immigration reported that some Australians
believed immigration policies had created ‘an underclass of Australians who are
propped up by a skewed social security system’.[35]
When it was first introduced in 1993 the NARWP was set at
six months (26 weeks) and applied only to unemployment and sickness payments.[36]
Incremental extensions to the NARWP became a source of budget savings. Now many
payments have a four-year waiting period.
1988–90: Coalition
policy proposals
In 1988 the Coalition policy document Future directions
outlined a general principle that ‘Australia should not admit for settlement
people who would represent an economic burden to Australia through inordinate
claims on welfare, health or other resources …’[37]
The Coalition went to the 1990 federal election promising
that ‘new migrants (excluding refugees), will not have access to unemployment,
sickness benefits or invalid pensions for 12 months after arrival in Australia’.[38]
According to a 1989 policy statement:
Migrants coming to work in Australia (excluding refugees) should
be expected to support themselves for at least 12 months. Illegal migrants
should not be entitled to any benefits including legal aid.
Except where reciprocal bilateral treaties otherwise provide
(i.e. New Zealanders), new migrants (excluding refugees), will not have access
to unemployment, sickness benefits or invalid pensions for 12 months after
arrival in Australia.
Australian residents who wish to sponsor family members or
others to reside in Australia under certain categories of the family reunion
schemes are required to lodge an Assurance of Support guarantee on their
behalf. A Liberal/National Government will strictly enforce these guarantees.
The Secretary of the Department of Social Security will have
the power to exempt persons in cases of extreme hardship.[39]
When a Greek community group criticised the proposal,
Opposition social security spokesman David Connolly argued that the policy
merely enforced existing assurance of support guarantees.[40]
The Coalition’s policy on waiting periods was part of a
broader plan to reduce government spending. Their Economic action plan
estimated that the 12-month residency requirement would produce savings of $45
million.[41]
The Labor Government contested this and released an estimate of savings by the Department
of Finance of $32 million.[42]
1991: Coalition
Fightback! policy proposals
The Coalition strengthened its position in a 1991 Fightback!
policy document by announcing plans for a two-year waiting period:
The Coalition will not permit future migrants access to
benefits for two years after they first arrive, unless they are given refugee
or humanitarian entry status. Access to Family Allowances will however be
maintained.
-
The Department of Social Security
has estimated the total value of social security payments made in 1990-91 to
overseas born clients who have been in Australia for two years or less to be
$399 million. This did not include Family Allowance nor Family Allowance
Supplement.
-
The Coalition's immigration
program will be structured in such a way to minimise the number of new entrants
who would go onto Special Benefits if their access to social security was
restricted, resulting in a saving of $250 million would be achievable.[43]
The Labor Government contested the Opposition’s savings
claim and released an alternative estimate by the Department of Finance that
showed full savings would not be reached until the third year of implementation.[44]
Then Prime Minister Paul Keating attacked the policy
saying ‘in a society with one of the most sophisticated and effective social
security systems in the world, the Tories want to introduce measures
characteristic of societies in decay’. As part of a list of measures he added ‘they'll
make migrants wait two years before they can claim benefits of any kind’.[45]
1992: Keating
Labor Government introduces six-month waiting period
As part of the 1992–93 Budget, the Keating Labor
Government announced a six-month (26 week) waiting period for unemployment and
sickness payments. The measure excluded refugees and humanitarian migrants and
allowed access to Special Benefit for those who suffered hardship during the
waiting period.[46]
Labor Minister for Immigration, Gerry Hand, stated that
‘immigration should neither add to net levels of unemployment nor push new
arrivals into dependency on government support beyond what other residents can
expect’.[47]
With unemployment high due to the recession, the then Minister
for Social Security, Neal Blewett, supported the Immigration Minister’s
position and voiced concern in Cabinet about the impact of immigration on the
social security budget with ‘one in four immigrants over the last two years on
benefits’.[48]
Shadow Minister for Immigration, Philip Ruddock, claimed
that Labor had adopted the Coalition’s policy and argued that the waiting
period should be extended to two years as proposed in Fightback![49]
The six-month waiting period was legislated in the Social Security
Legislation Amendment Act (No. 3) 1992.
The estimated savings from this measure were $6.75 million
in the first year and $29.10 million in the second year.[50]
The smaller savings estimates for the Labor policy are a result of two
differences from the proposed Coalition policy — the shorter waiting period and
the more limited number of payments affected.
1993–1996:
Coalition proposes a two-year waiting period
In opposition, the Coalition continued its support for a
two-year waiting period. In a 1993 policy document, the Coalition argued:
The immediate availability of social security benefits to new
arrivals has been a significant ‘pull factor’, attracting people who could achieve
a higher standard of living than they could in their country of origin.[51]
In 1996, before the election, the Coalition released Meeting
our commitments, a policy document that provided detailed costings. The
document announced that under a Coalition Government: ‘Access to welfare
benefits for migrants other than refugee and humanitarian migrants will be
available after two years’.
The document did not list the payments that would be
subject to the two-year waiting period but did state that there would be no
waiting period for Family Allowance.
Savings were estimated as $84 million in the first year
rising to $252 million and $280 million in the next two years.[52]
1996: Howard
Coalition Government introduces a two-year waiting period
In April 1996, the new Minister for Social Security,
Jocelyn Newman, announced:
Migrants who enter Australia from today will be subject to a
minimum two year waiting period. This will extend the current provision that
new migrants should wait 26 weeks before they get access to Social Security
payments, which was introduced by the Keating Government.[53]
The Bill for this measure, the Social Security Legislation
Amendment (Newly Arrived Resident's Waiting Periods and Other Measures) Bill
1996, applied the waiting period to a broader range of payments than the
existing 26-week policy.[54]
The Labor Party opposed the Bill arguing that the changes went
beyond what the Coalition promised during the election campaign. In a September
1996 interview Labor Senator John Faulkner said:
We've accepted
that the Government campaigned in the election on a two-year waiting period but
we have not accepted the sneaky trick of the Government to extend this migrant
two-year waiting period to a range of other benefits that weren't anticipated
to be included in the first place.[55]
Earlier, Labor Party frontbencher Peter Baldwin said, ‘the
Prime Minister and his party believe that this is the sort of thing you can do
without significant electoral cost’ and accused the Government of pandering to
talkback radio and tabloid media audiences.[56]
The Bill was passed as the Social Security
Legislation Amendment (Newly Arrived Resident’s Waiting Periods and Other
Measures) Act 1997.
1998–2018: Removal
of exemptions and other changes
Between 1997 and 2018 governments made only minor changes
to the NARWP. These included:
- applying
the two-year (104 week) waiting period to newly arrived residents from New
Zealand[57]
- removing
the family member exemption from the NARWP served before Special Benefit is
payable[58]
- removing
the exemption from the NARWP for social security payments and benefits for new
migrants who are family members of Australian citizens or long-time permanent
residents.[59]
2016: Controversy over leaked visa reform proposals
In November 2016 a controversy over a Department of
Immigration and Border Protection (DIBP) proposal for provisional visas erupted
after Fairfax Media published a leaked government document.[60]
The proposal would have further delayed migrants’ access to income support.
The document was prepared by the Department of Social
Services (DSS) ahead of a meeting between the DSS and DIBP secretaries. It
dealt with a larger visa reform proposal, an element of which was to implement
a provisional visa stage for all or most permanent visas, removing direct
access to permanent residence.
According to the leaked document ‘DIBP are depending on
savings from reduced access to social security payments to partially offset
what we understand are huge costs of their proposal …’ The document stated:
DSS is concerned that the proposed reforms risk undermining
Australia’s social cohesion (and potentially increase the risk factors that may
lead to violent extremism) by creating double standards treating migrants and
citizens very differently.[61]
Labor’s Shadow Minister for Immigration and Border
Protection, Shayne Neumann, noted these comments in a 2018 speech but did not
take a position aside from saying: ‘Any proposed changes to Australia's
immigration program must not undermine its strength - its non-discriminatory
nature’.[62]
2018: Coalition
Government attempts to introduce consistent four-year waiting periods
In 2018 the Turnbull Coalition Government increased the
NARWP for some payments to four years. Legislation for these changes passed
with the support of the Labor Party.
The Government initially proposed a three-year waiting
period but later extended this to a proposal for a consistent four-year waiting
period. The resulting Act—the Social Services
and Other Legislation Amendment (Promoting Sustainable Welfare) Act 2018—represented
a compromise.
The Government’s first proposal was included in the
2017–18 Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO). The Turnbull Coalition
Government announced an intention to:
- extend
the two-year waiting period on a range of payments to three years
- apply
a three-year waiting period to FTB, PPL and Carers Allowance.[63]
These measures were incorporated into the Social Services
Legislation Amendment (Encouraging Self-sufficiency for Newly Arrived Migrants)
Bill 2018.[64]
The Bill was introduced in February 2018 but was not debated in the House of
Representatives until November 2018.
In the 2018–19 Budget (released in May 2018) the
Government proposed a four-year waiting period:
The Government will achieve savings of $202.5 million over
five years from 2017–18 by increasing the waiting period for newly arrived
migrants to access certain welfare benefits from three years to four years from
1 July 2018. This measure also clarifies the application of the waiting period
and exemptions for certain welfare benefits.[65]
Labor responded by entering into negotiations with the
Government. Shadow ministers then announced that they had ‘secured major
concessions to protect vulnerable people, families and children’.[66]
These concessions included preventing the Government from introducing a waiting
period for FTB-B, preventing an increase in the length of the waiting period
for Carer Payment and Widow Allowance, and reducing the length of the new waiting
periods introduced for a number of other payments (see Table 4).
The Bill was revised to include these changes and renamed
the Social Services and Other Legislation Amendment (Promoting Sustainable
Welfare) Bill 2018.
Table 4: changes
to the NARWP made by the Social Services and Other Legislation Amendment
(Promoting Sustainable Welfare) Act 2018
Payment |
Changes to the NARWP |
From |
To |
Newstart Allowancea |
2 years (104 weeks) |
4 years (208 weeks) |
Youth Allowance |
2 years (104 weeks) |
4 years (208 weeks) |
Sickness Allowanceb |
2 years (104 weeks) |
4 years (208 weeks) |
Special Benefit |
2 years (104 weeks) |
4 years (208 weeks) |
Austudy |
2 years (104 weeks) |
4 years (208 weeks) |
Mobility Allowance |
2 years (104 weeks) |
4 years (208 weeks) |
Pensioner Education Supplement |
2 years (104 weeks) |
4 years (208 weeks) |
Farm Household Allowance |
2 years (104 weeks) |
4 years (208 weeks) |
Commonwealth Seniors Health Card |
2 years (104 weeks) |
4 years (208 weeks)e |
Low Income Health Care Card |
2 years (104 weeks) |
4 years (208 weeks)e |
Bereavement Allowancec |
None |
4 years (208 weeks) |
Parenting Paymentc |
None |
4 years (208 weeks) |
Carer Payment |
2 years (104 weeks) |
2 years (104 weeks) |
Widow Allowanced |
2 years (104 weeks) |
2 years (104 weeks) |
Parental Leave Pay |
None |
2 years (104 weeks) |
Dad and Partner Pay |
None |
2 years (104 weeks) |
Carer Allowance |
None |
1 year (52 weeks) |
Family Tax Benefit Part A |
None |
1 year (52 weeks) |
Family Tax Benefit Part B |
None |
None |
- Newstart Allowance ceased
on 20 March 2020 and was replaced by JobSeeker Payment.
- Sickness Allowance ceased on 20 September 2020.
- Bereavement Allowance was closed to new entrants from 20
March 2020. It ceased when the bereavement period of all recipients ended (the
allowance was paid for up to 14 weeks). Prior to the 2018 changes, Bereavement
Allowance and Parenting Payment had two-year residency period requirements
rather than a NARWP.
- Widow Allowance was closed to new entrants on 1 July 2018
and will cease completely on 1 January 2022.
- 104 weeks for Special Category visa holders.
Source: Department of Human Services (DHS), A
guide to Australian Government payments: 20 September–31 December 2018, DHS, Canberra, 2018; Social Services
and Other Legislation Amendment (Promoting Sustainable Welfare) Act 2018;
Department of Social Services (DSS), Fact
Sheet – Cessation of Newstart Allowance, DSS, Canberra, 2020; DSS, Fact
Sheet - Cessation of Bereavement Allowance, DSS, Canberra, 2020; DSS, Fact
Sheet – Cessation of Sickness Allowance, DSS, Canberra, 2020; DSS, Fact
Sheet – Cessation of Widow Allowance, DSS, Canberra, 2020.
In her second reading speech on the Bill, Labor’s Shadow
Minister for Families and Social Services, Linda Burney, explained the Opposition’s
approach saying, ‘we could not leave this to One Nation and the Senate
crossbench to decide’.[67]
Australian Greens’ MP Adam Bandt criticised the Bill in
the House of Representatives saying that it would ‘create an underclass of
migrants in this society and will result in second-class citizens who will now
have to wait longer to get the kind of support that most people—other people in
this country—are entitled to’.[68]
A number of crossbench senators criticised the agreement
between the Government and Opposition claiming that the Bill would not have
passed the Senate without Labor’s support.[69]
Centre Alliance Senator Stirling Griff told the Senate that the ‘Government and
Labor are treating migrants as piggy banks by doubling the amount of time they
will have to wait for benefits, without any thought whatsoever to the hardship
this can cause’.[70]
Commenting on Labor’s position, Senator Pauline Hanson
remarked ‘I am so proud of the Labor Party that you're now going to support
this because you can see some common sense.’[71]
Commentary on the One Nation web site claimed the Bill’s passage as a win for
One Nation because ‘the Labor party publicity admitted that it was the
influence of One Nation that forced them to support the legislation’.[72]
Key issues
and provisions
Extensions to the duration and scope of the NARWP have
become a source of budget savings. When a six-month waiting period was first
applied in the early 1990s, the Sydney Morning Herald reported that the
Department of Finance had been pushing for the measure against resistance from the
Social Security and Immigration departments.[73]
It is possible that future governments will seek to achieve further savings by continuing
to incrementally extend the NARWP.
Effect of
the Bill
As shown in Table 5, the major effect of the Bill is to
lengthen the NARWP for Carer Payment, Carer Allowance, FTB-A, PLP and DaPP; and
to apply a NARWP to FTB-B.
As part of the 2018–19 Budget, the Coalition Government
sought to apply a four-year waiting period for these payments with the
‘Encouraging Self-Sufficiency for Newly Arrived Migrants — extension’.[74]
However, as discussed above, during negotiations over legislation for this
measure, the Government made a number of concessions. With the amendments
proposed in the Bill, the Government is again seeking to implement a four-year
waiting period for these payments.
Table 5: key
changes to NARWPs proposed by the Social Services Legislation Amendment
(Consistent Waiting Periods for New Migrants) Bill 2021
Payment |
Proposed changes to NARWPs |
From |
To |
Items in Bill |
Carer Payment |
104 weeks (2 years) |
208 weeks (4 years) |
Schedule 1, items 5–6
Amends: Social Security Act 1991 |
Carer Allowance |
52 weeks |
208 weeks |
Schedule 1, items 13–14
Amends: Social Security Act 1991 |
Family Tax Benefit Part A |
52 weeks |
208 weeks |
Schedule 2, items 2–5
Amends: A New Tax System (Family Assistance) Act 1999 |
Family Tax Benefit Part B |
None |
208 weeks |
Parental Leave Pay |
104 weeks |
208 weeks |
Schedule 3, items 1–6
Amends Paid Parental Leave Act 2010 |
Dad and Partner Pay |
104 weeks |
208 weeks |
The Department of Social Services estimates that in
2024–25, around 45,000 families will be affected by the proposed FTB NARWP
changes and 13,200 individuals will be affected by the changes to other waiting
periods.[75]
According to data provided by the Department of Social Services, the greatest
impact would be on families who would be denied access to Family Tax Benefit.
The numbers affected are shown in Table 6.
Table 6: estimated
number of people affected by payment type
Payment type |
2021–22 |
2022–23 |
2023–24 |
2024–25 |
Carer Payment |
0 |
0 |
632 |
1
859 |
Carer Allowance |
0 |
1 017 |
3 643 |
7 295 |
Parental Leave Pay |
0 |
0 |
1 388 |
3 902 |
Dad and Partner Pay |
0 |
0 |
641 |
1 951 |
Family Tax Benefit Part A (families) |
0 |
6 307 |
21 580 |
39 754 |
Family Tax Benefit Part B
(families) |
4 950 |
16 892 |
31 106 |
45 020 |
Note:
These figures cannot be totalled as payments are not mutually exclusive and a
person may be affected in relation to more than one payment type. Figures
are based on the 2021–22 Migration Program planning levels and reflect future
permanent visa grants.
Source: DSS, Submission
to Senate Community Affairs Committee, Inquiry into the Social Services
Legislation Amendment (Consistent Waiting Periods for New Migrants) Bill 2021,
30 July 2021, p. 5.
Currently the NARWP for the Low Income Health Care Card
and Commonwealth Seniors Health Card is four years (208 weeks). However, SCV
holders and Temporary Partner visa holders currently have a two-year (104 week)
waiting period for these concession cards. The Bill extends the NARWP for these
visa holders to four years (208 weeks).
The Bill also makes a number of technical and
consequential amendments. These are adequately explained in the Explanatory
Memorandum.
The risk of
hardship
Opponents of extensions to the NARWP have argued that it exposes
newly arrived migrants and their children to a risk of hardship.[76]
During debate on the 2018 Bill Greens Senator Nick McKim claimed that the
measure would ‘inflict poverty, misery, destitution and homelessness on many
thousands of people who are trying to get by and who have come here to make a
contribution to our community’.[77]
Defending Labor’s decision to negotiate amendments to the
2018 Bill, Shadow Minister for Families and Social Services Linda Burney argued
that the Government’s proposed changes ‘would have caused significant hardship
for thousands of vulnerable individuals, families and children’.[78]
The Government has not presented any data or research to
rebut claims that increases in the NARWP are likely to lead to hardship. However,
the Senate Committee examining the 2018 Bill noted that the exemptions from the
NARWP preserved by the Bill would ‘maintain a safety net for migrants who find
themselves in need and are supported by departmental processes to refer people
to appropriate support services and prioritise applications where necessary’.[79]
In a submission to the Senate committee inquiry into the 2018
Bill, the Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) argued that the safety
net for newly arrived migrants is not adequate, arguing that it was difficult
for newly arrived migrants to access Special Benefit and, even when they could,
were likely to find themselves in deep poverty.[80]
In its submission on this Bill, ACOSS argued that:
The denial of Family Tax Benefit for four years from when a
permanent visa is granted will hurt children born in Australia who have migrant
parents. These children will likely live in poverty as a result, as Family Tax
Benefit is a critical payment for low-income families, including families in
low-paid work.[81]
Fairness
Defenders of the NARWP have argued that it is reasonable
to expect new migrants to support themselves and their children.[82]
In the Senate, One Nation’s Pauline Hanson defended the 2018 Bill saying:
I don't think it is unreasonable to ask these people to wait
an extra year. The Australian people are paying taxes in this country for
migrants who come here of their own choice. I don't think it's unreasonable to
say to the migrants: 'Make sure you can provide for yourself. You've really
given nothing to this country, so don't expect to come here and have all the
handouts.'[83]
In contrast, in a submission on the 2018 Bill the
Brotherhood of St Laurence cited the Department of Home Affairs’ claim that ‘overall,
migrants contribute more in taxes than they consume in benefits and government
goods and services’.[84]
Waiting
periods for labour-force and student payments compared to those for carers
Prior to 2018, changes to waiting periods focused on
income support payments intended to support those not working or who were
undertaking study (such as JobSeeker Payment and Austudy). The 2018 changes saw
the extension of waiting periods to new categories of payments. These were: to
those caring for someone with disability or illness, to supplementary payments
for carers (including those who work), and to payments for families. This
marked a change from expecting new migrants in the labour force to be self-sufficient
to also expecting new migrants to care for children, disabled and the sick
without accessing any financial assistance from the Australian Government.
While in many cases having children is planned, in some
cases it is unexpected. The onset of illnesses or accidents giving rise to
disability can also be unexpected and sudden. Partly in recognition of this
fact, the ten-year residency requirement for access to Disability Support
Pension does not apply where the person’s inability to work arises when they
were an Australian resident.[85]
The NARWP for Carer Payment and Carer Allowance applies regardless of whether a
person’s caring responsibilities have only arisen as a result of a sudden,
unexpected event or illness.
Existing
exemptions remain
According to the Explanatory Memorandum for the Bill,
existing exemptions from the NARWP will continue to apply to payments that are
currently subject to the NARWP and will also apply to FTB‑B.[86]
Behavioural
change
As raised in the Bills Digest for the Social Services
Legislation Amendment (Encouraging Self-sufficiency for Newly Arrived Migrants)
Bill 2018, the proposed changes to NARWPs could lead to certain behavioural
change from migrants.[87]
As Australian citizens are exempt from the NARWP, the Bill creates an
additional incentive for new migrants to seek Australian citizenship.
Currently, to become a citizen by conferral, the general
residency requirement must be met (unless exempt). This requires an individual
to:
- have
been living in Australia on a valid visa (including temporary visas) for the
past four years and
- have
been a permanent resident or eligible New Zealand citizen for the past 12
months and
- not
have been away from Australia for more than 12 months in total over the
previous four years, including no more than 90 days in total for the previous
12 months.[88]
Unlike the requirements for the NARWP, the citizenship
residency requirement only has a requirement for an individual to have been a
permanent resident for 12 months. Those who have been in Australia on temporary
visas prior to being granted a permanent visa could meet the citizenship
requirement much faster than a four-year NARWP.
While there is an application fee for citizenship by
conferral, the amount—$490 for an adult—could be much less than the benefit
gained by a person being able to access payments such as FTB or PPL.[89]
Key provisions
Social
Security Act 1991
Item 5 of Schedule 1 to the Bill amends the NARWP requirement
for Carer Payment at paragraph 201AA(1)(b) of the SS Act so that
it applies to those who have not been an Australian resident and in Australia for
208 weeks. The current requirement is 104 weeks.
Item 6 increases the NARWP duration for Carer
Payment at paragraph 201AB(b) from 104 weeks to 208 weeks.
Item 8 repeals paragraph 500(1)(d) which
provides a 104-week residency requirement for Parenting Payment. The residency
requirement is redundant due to a 208-week NARWP also applying to Parenting
Payment. Items 9–12 are consequential amendments to item 8
removing notes and provisions relevant to the residency requirement.
Item 13 amends the NARWP requirement for Carer
Allowance at paragraph 966(1)(b) so that it applies to those who have
not been an Australian resident and in Australia for 208 weeks. The current
requirement is 52 weeks.
Item 14 increases the NARWP duration for Carer
Allowance at subsection 967(2) from 52 weeks to 208 weeks.
Subitem 17(1) provides for the application of the
proposed amendments affecting Carer Payment and Carer Allowance to apply in
relation to individuals who become the holder of a permanent visa on or after
commencement. However, under subitem 17(2), the proposed amendments to
the Carer Payment NARWP do not apply to those who, on or after commencement of
the changes, become the holder of one of the following visas: subclass 117
(Orphan Relative), subclass 837 (Orphan Relative), subclass 115 (Remaining
Relative) or subclass 835 (Remaining Relative). These visa holders will still
be subject to a 104-week NARWP. Application provisions under item 21 of Schedule
1 to the Social
Services and Other Legislation Amendment (Promoting Sustainable Welfare) Act 2018 provide
that the Carer Allowance NARWP does not apply to these visa subclasses.
Subitem 17(4) also provides that the amendments in Part
1 of Schedule 1 do not apply to special category visa holders who are protected
SCV holders.
Subitem 17(5) provides that the amendments to the
NARWP for the Commonwealth Seniors Health Card and the Low Income Health Card
made by the Social
Services and Other Legislation Amendment (Promoting Sustainable Welfare) Act
2018 apply in relation to first-time SCV holders on commencement of
Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Bill, unless the person is a protected SCV holder.
This means that new SCV holders will be subject to the 208-week NARWP for these
concession cards, rather than the previous 104-week waiting period.
Subitem 17(6) provides for the amendments to the
NARWP for the Low Income Health Card made by the Social Services
and Other Legislation Amendment (Promoting Sustainable Welfare) Act 2018
to apply to those granted a subclass 309 (Partner (Provisional)) or subclass
820 (Partner) visa for the first time on or after the commencement of Part 1 of
Schedule 1 to the Bill.[90]
This means that new holders of these temporary visas will be subject to a
208-week waiting period for the Low Income Health Care Card rather a 104-week
waiting period.
Social
Security (International Agreements) Act 1999
Item 18 of Schedule 1 to the Bill repeals subparagraph
10(1)(d)(ii), and item 19 repeals and substitutes subsection
10(2) of the Social
Security (International Agreements) Act 1999 to remove references to
the residency requirement for Parenting Payment, repealed by item 8.
A New Tax
System (Family Assistance) Act 1999
Item 2 of Schedule 2 to the Bill amends subsection
61AA(1) of the FA Act so that a NARWP applies to both FTB-A and FTB-B.
Currently, only FTB-A is subject to a NARWP. For days during an individual’s
NARWP, their rate of FTB-A or FTB-B is zero.
Items 3–5 extend the duration of any applicable
NARWP for FTB from 52 weeks to 208 weeks.
Subitem 6(1) provides for these amendments to apply
to those who become the holder of a permanent visa or a temporary visa eligible
for Special Benefit on or after the commencement of Schedule 2 to the Bill
(this includes temporary partner visas and some temporary humanitarian visas).[91]
The amendments will not apply to the following visas: subclass 117 (Orphan
Relative), subclass 837 (Orphan Relative), subclass 115 (Remaining Relative) or
subclass 835 (Remaining Relative).
Subitem 6(2) provides that the amendments do not apply
in relation to a person who on or after 1 January 2019, and before the
commencement of Schedule 2 to the Bill, became the holder of a temporary visa
eligible for Special Benefit. This means that those granted one of these temporary
visas after 1 July 2019 but before the commencement of Schedule 2 may be
subject to a 52-week NARWP and will not be subject to a 208-week NARWP if they
are later granted a permanent visa.
Paid
Parental Leave Act 2010
Items 1–3 of Schedule 3 to the Bill extend the
duration of the NARWP that applies for PPL—set at paragraphs 31A(2)(e) and
31A(3)(d) and subsection 31A(4) of the PPL Act—from 104 weeks
to 208 weeks.
Items 4–5 extend the duration of the NARWP that
applies for DaPP—set at paragraphs 115CBA(2)(e) and 115CBA(3)(d)—from
104 weeks to 208 weeks.
Subitem 7(1) provides for the amendments to the PPL
NARWP to apply to those who become the holder of a permanent visa or a
temporary visa eligible for Special Benefit on or after the commencement of
Schedule 3 to the Bill.[92]
The amendments will not apply to the following visas: subclass 117 (Orphan
Relative), subclass 837 (Orphan Relative), subclass 115 (Remaining Relative) or
subclass 835 (Remaining Relative).
Subitem 7(2) provides that the amendments to the
PPL NARWP do not apply in relation to a person who on or after 1 January 2019,
and before the commencement of Schedule 3 to the Bill, became the holder of a
temporary visa eligible for Special Benefit. This means that those granted one
of these temporary visas after 1 July 2019 but before the commencement of
Schedule 3 may be subject to a 104-week NARWP but will not be subject to a 208-week
NARWP if they are later granted a permanent visa.
Subitem 7(3) provides for these amendments to the
DaPP NARWP to apply to those who become the holder of a permanent visa or a
temporary visa eligible for Special Benefit on or after the commencement of
Schedule 3 to the Bill.[93]
The amendments will not apply to the following visas: subclass 117 (Orphan
Relative), subclass 837 (Orphan Relative), subclass 115 (Remaining Relative) or
subclass 835 (Remaining Relative).
Subitem 7(4) provides that the amendments to the
DaPP NARWP do not apply in relation to a person who on or after 1 January 2019,
and before the commencement of Schedule 3 to the Bill, became the holder of a
temporary visa eligible for Special Benefit. This means that those granted one
of these temporary visas after 1 July 2019 but before the commencement of
Schedule 3 may be subject to a 104-week NARWP but will not be subject to a 208-week
NARWP if they are later granted a permanent visa.
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
At the time of writing, non-government parties and
independents have not commented on the Bill. The background section of this Bills
Digest discusses the policy positions political parties and independents have
taken on similar Bills in the past.
Position of
major interest groups
Most interest groups oppose the measures with some such as
ACOSS and the Committee for Economic Development of Australia (CEDA) calling
for a reduction in NARWP.[94]
Responding to the budget announcement, CEDA senior economist Gabriela D’Souza
said: ‘To me it seems like a blatant money grab from people who can’t vote’.[95]
Not all groups were opposed to the measure. A submission
by the National Council of Women Australia stated that the organisation:
‘supports the changes contained in the bill providing a consistent approach
across all relevant payments’.[96]
Lack of reasonable
protection against risk
The Government’s position is that if someone chooses to
migrate to Australia permanently, it is their responsibility to make sure they can
support themselves and their families for a reasonable period of time after
they arrive.[97]
Some interest groups argue that there are some major risks beyond migrants’
control.
Carers Australia is ‘opposed to the principle of waiting
periods for carers that are set on the basis of length of Australian residency’
arguing:
Anyone can become a carer at any time. Migrants seeking to
make Australia their home are not anticipating that this will happen to them.
It may come about as a result of a serious accident to a family member or the
diagnosis of a serious illness; possibly affecting the major income earner of
the family. It may occur through the birth of a child with a disability. In
many cases it may result in the loss of the carer’s own employment due to
providing increasing or constant care. At the same time, it will involve the
necessity to meet a range of additional costs, including medical costs.[98]
Impact on
women and children
According to Settlement Services International (SSI):
The bulk of the savings of over $500m come from cutting the
support to families which suggests that it is parents, especially sole parents
or single income households, and their children who are most likely to be
impacted by these proposed changes.[99]
ACOSS also highlighted the impact on women and children
arguing that the measure would ‘target women (and their children) as the
payments affected are overwhelmingly received by women providing care’.[100]
The ACOSS submission also argued that denying women family and carer payments
would prevent them from leaving abusive partners and expose them to the risk of
domestic violence.[101]
Long term
impacts of child poverty
The Centre for Excellence in Child and Family Welfare
argued that additional waiting periods would increase child poverty and that
this, in turn, would lead to long-term harms:
Imposing additional waiting periods to access social security
benefits will push already at-risk families to the brink. Without the critical
payments of FTB Part A which is paid per child, and the FTB Part B which is
paid to low income families (many of whom are single parents), many children
will be forced to live in poverty. The impact of poverty on young children in
already highly vulnerable families has been linked to negative impacts on
children’s health, social, emotional and cognitive development and educational
outcomes.[102]
Impact on
skills mismatch
Some groups argue that access to unemployment payments
would give new migrants a better chance of finding a job that matched their
skills rather than taking the first available job. They argue that this would
benefit both migrants and the Australian economy.
For example, prior to the release of the 2021–22 Budget,
CEDA recommended reducing the NARWP for unemployment benefits to six months ‘to
give permanent skilled migrants a better chance to find the right job’.[103]
SSI opposed the budget measure when it was announced. CEO
Violet Roumeliotis argued that increased wait times ‘would undermine efforts
for new arrivals to find suitable long-term employment’. SSI endorsed CEDA’s
argument that the NARWP should be reduced.[104]
Appendix A: selected
NARWP exemptions by benefit
Some newly arrived migrants are exempt from the NARWP for
all payments and cards. These are:
- Australian
citizens
- refugees
or former refugees
- family
members of refugees or humanitarian migrants (where the person is still a
family member when they claim, or where the refugee has died, the person was a
family member immediately before the refugee's death).[105]
Other exemptions apply to particular payments. Some of the
main exemption categories are set out in Table A1.
Table A1: current
exemptions from the NARWP by payment category
Benefit |
Carer visas, subclass
104 or 806(a) |
Carers visa, subclass
116 or 836(b) |
Orphan relative &
remaining relative visas(c) |
Temporary Humanitarian
visa(d) |
Principal carer/lone
parent(e) |
Special Category Visa
(SCV)(f) |
Family Tax
Benefit Part A |
|
|
✓ |
✓ |
|
✓ |
Carer Allowance |
|
✓ |
✓ |
|
|
|
Carer Payment |
✓ |
✓ |
|
|
|
|
Parental Leave Pay |
|
|
✓ |
✓ |
|
✓ |
Dad and
Partner Pay |
|
|
✓ |
✓ |
|
✓ |
JobSeeker Payment |
|
|
|
|
✓ |
|
Youth
Allowance (Student & apprentice) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Youth Allowance (other) |
|
|
|
|
✓ |
|
Parenting
Payment |
|
|
|
|
✓ |
|
Special Benefit |
|
|
|
✓ |
|
|
Austudy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mobility Allowance |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pensioner
Education Supplement |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Farm Household Allowance |
|
|
|
|
✓ |
|
Commonwealth
Seniors Health Card |
|
|
|
✓ |
|
|
Low Income Health Care
Card |
|
|
|
✓ |
|
|
Notes:
- These visas could be issued to carers. Visa subclasses 104
(Preferential Family) and 806 (Family) have been closed to new applicants since
November 1999.
- Visa subclasses 116 and 836 are the currently available
carer visas.
- Visa subclass 117 and 837. These visas allow a child who is
single to stay with a relative if their parents are dead, cannot care for them
or cannot be found.
- This exemption is given to holders of a number of temporary
humanitarian visas.
- This exemption is given to a person who is the principal
carer of one or more children; is not a member of a couple; and at the start of
the person's current period of Australian residence, the person was not a lone
parent.
- Special Category Visa (SCV) is a temporary visa that allows
New Zealand citizens to visit, study, stay, and work in Australia.
Sources: Services Australia (SA), ‘Exemptions
to the newly arrived resident's waiting period’, SA website, last updated 8
April 2021; DSS, ‘3.1.2.43
Exemptions for the NARWP’, Social security guide, DSS website, last
reviewed 20 March 2020; Explanatory
Statement, Migration Amendment Regulations 1999 (No. 13); Department of
Home Affairs (DHA), ‘Visa
list’, DHA website, 18 March 2021.