Introductory Info
Date introduced: 21
October 2021
House: House of
Representatives
Portfolio: Veterans'
Affairs
Commencement: Sections
1–3 on Royal Assent; Schedules 1–3 and Schedule 5 on 1 January 2022;
Schedule 4 on 1 July 2022.
The Bills Digest at a glance
The Veterans’ Affairs Legislation
Amendment (Exempting Disability Payments from Income Testing and Other
Measures) Bill 2021 (the Bill) proposes amendments to the Veterans
Entitlements Act 1986 (the VE Act), the Military
Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004 (the MRC Act) and various
social security, family assistance, child support and income tax Acts to:
- exempt
certain disability pensions paid under the VE Act and the MRC Act
from the social security income test
- remove
the Defence Force Income Support Allowance, which currently tops-up the rate of
social security payments reduced as a result of disability pensions paid under
the VE Act or the MRC Act
- remove
an income test that applies to Rent Assistance paid to some veterans’
disability pension recipients, which will allow those receiving higher rates of
disability compensation to receive higher rates of Rent Assistance
- change
references to ‘Disability Pension’ in the VE Act to the terms ‘pensions
by way of compensation to veterans and their dependants’ or ‘pensions’ to
clarify that it is a compensation payment not a means tested income support
pension
- change
the way certain rates of the veterans’ Disability Pension are indexed so that
different components of the total rate are not indexed separately
- establish
a pilot program allowing veterans to access rehabilitation without making a
claim for liability for an injury or medical condition.
The measures are in response to the 2019 Independent
Review into the TPI Payment by David Tune (the Tune Review) and recommendations
of the Productivity Commission’s 2019 report, A Better Way to Support
Veterans.
Other than the changes to Rent Assistance arrangements,
the changes affecting veterans’ disability compensation payments will have
little impact on recipients and their families. The removal of the disability
income test for Rent Assistance paid under the VE Act will benefit 6,900
veterans and their dependants.
The proposed non-liability rehabilitation pilot program
will run for two years with around 100 veterans expected to access the program
in each year.
The changes relating to disability compensation payments
will cost an estimated $33.3 million over four years. The non-liability
rehabilitation program will cost $2.3 million over four years (including the
cost of an evaluation).
The TPI Federation, an ex-service organisation, has
welcomed the changes providing greater access to Rent Assistance for veterans
receiving disability compensation. However, the changes do not address the key
concern of the TPI Federation around the level of the Special rate of
Disability Pension under the VE Act. The Tune Review, Productivity
Commission report and a separate 2019 report by KPMG did not support the TPI
Federation’s call for an increase in the Special rate. A Senate committee
inquiry in 2021 did recommend the Government consider an increase in the
Special rate.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Veterans’
Affairs Legislation Amendment (Exempting Disability Payments from Income
Testing and Other Measures) Bill 2021 (the Bill) is to amend the Veterans
Entitlements Act 1986 (the VE Act), the Military
Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004 (the MRC Act) and
various social security, family assistance, child support and income tax Acts
to:
- exempt
certain disability pensions paid under the VE Act and the MRC Act
from the social security income test
- remove
the Defence Force Income Support Allowance, which currently tops-up the rate of
social security payments reduced as a result of disability pensions paid under
the VE Act or the MRC Act
- remove
an income test that applies to Rent Assistance paid to some veterans’
disability pension recipients, which will allow those receiving higher rates of
disability compensation to receive higher rates of Rent Assistance
- change
references to ‘Disability Pension’ in the VE Act to the terms ‘pensions by way of compensation to veterans and their
dependants’ or ‘pensions’ to clarify that it is a compensation payment
rather than a means tested income support pension
- change
the way certain rates of the veterans’ Disability Pension are indexed so that
different components of the total rate are not indexed separately
- establish
a pilot program allowing veterans to access rehabilitation without making a
claim for liability for an injury or medical condition being accepted.
The Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill states that the measures
are in response to the 2019 Independent Review into the TPI Payment by David
Tune (the Tune Review) and recommendation 6.3 of the Productivity Commission’s
2019 report, A Better Way to Support Veterans.[1]
The Disability Pension changes, removal of the Defence
Force Income Support Allowance and Rent Assistance measures were announced in
the 2020–21 Budget.[2]
The non-liability rehabilitation pilot was announced in the 2021–22 Budget.[3]
Structure of
the Bill and the Bills Digest
The Bill comprises five Schedules, four of which relate to
the veterans’ disability compensation measures and one providing for the non-liability
rehabilitation pilot. The Background and Key Issues sections of
this Bills Digest focus on the disability compensation measures, and the
amendments relating to the rehabilitation pilot are addressed in brief.
Background
Overview of
veterans’ compensation schemes
There are three main Acts that provide for support and
compensation for veterans and their dependants:
- the
VE Act which primarily provides benefits and entitlements for those who
undertook wartime service, operational service, peacekeeping service and
hazardous military service before 1 July 2004, and/or peacetime
military service from 7 December 1972 up to 30 June 1994[4]
- the
Safety,
Rehabilitation and Compensation (Defence-related Claims) Act 1988 (the DRC
Act) which provides coverage for illness, injury or death arising from
military service undertaken from 3 January 1949 to 30 June 2004; and for
certain periods of operational service between 7 April 1994 and 30
June 2004[5]
and
- the
MRC Act, which provides coverage for illness, injury or death arising
from military service undertaken from 1 July 2004.[6]
The DRC Act and MRC Act have many
similarities with civilian worker’s compensation schemes, providing payments, rehabilitation
services and treatments for injuries and disease arising from military service,
and compensation for the dependants of veterans who have died because of their
service.
The VE Act is different. The VE Act also provides
compensation payments and rehabilitation services for injuries and disease
arising from military service, and compensation for veterans who have died
because of their service, as well as means-tested income support payments
similar to social security payments; health treatments for both service-related
conditions and, for eligible individuals, treatments for non-service-related
conditions or conditions for which no liability has being accepted; as well as
a range of other allowances and assistance programs for veterans.
Some VE Act benefits, such as income support
payments, are not tied to periods of service but rather the type of service
(for example, whether it involved service during wartime in an area where there
was danger from hostile enemy forces). Other benefits, such as compensation
payments and benefits, are tied to periods of service—eligibility under one or
more of the three statutes will be determined by the period of service and the
timing of the event giving rise to compensation (such as an injury or death).
Compensation
payments for disability
The three schemes provide different forms of compensation
payments for injuries or disease caused or aggravated by military service.
The MRC Act and DRC Act provide permanent
impairment compensation payments for the functional impairment and lifestyle
effects from injuries or disease accepted as being related to service covered
by these Acts—both Acts provide for these payments to be made as lump sums
while the MRC Act also provides for permanent impairment payments to be
made periodically.[7]
These two schemes also provide periodic incapacity payments which compensate
for the economic loss arising from the accepted injuries or disease.
The VE Act does not provide lump sum payments for
injuries or disease accepted as being related to a veteran’s service. Instead,
the VE Act provides the periodic (fortnightly) Disability Pension.[8]
There are different rates of the Disability Pension:
- the
General rate, which is determined by a point-based assessment of the medical
and lifestyle impacts of a veteran’s impairment—this assessment determines
which level of the General rate is paid, in 10 per cent increments up to the
maximum per fortnight, and
- three
Above General rates which provide a payment level beyond the maximum General
rate. Two of these Above General rates, the Special rate (often known as the
Totally and Permanently Incapacitated (TPI) rate) and the Intermediate rate
compensate for the impact of the veterans’ disability on their ability to earn
income. The other, the Extreme Disablement Adjustment (EDA) rate, is for those
aged 65 or more considered to have an extreme level of disability but who are
ineligible for the Intermediate or Special rates.[9]
MRC Act
Special Rate Disability Pension
The MRC Act also provides a payment known as the Special
Rate Disability Pension (SRDP).[10]
While having a similar name and being paid at the same rate as the Special rate
of Disability Pension under the VE Act, the SRDP is a different payment
with different conditions attached. It is offered as an alternative to MRC
Act incapacity payments for eligible veterans.[11]
The SRDP is intended as a safety net payment for those whose incapacity
payments, combined with other benefits such as permanent impairment
compensation and superannuation, fall below the level of the Special rate of
Disability Pension paid under the VEA. This might include part-time
defence force members with a low level of civilian income and no access to a
Commonwealth superannuation scheme. The payment was originally intended to
ensure no one would be worse-off in the transition from coverage under the VE
Act to the MRC Act—particularly those in junior ranks.[12]
Offsetting
Depending on their circumstances, individuals can be
eligible for compensation under more than one of the statutory schemes for the
same condition. Where an individual receives compensation from more than one of
the schemes for the same condition, one of their payments will be reduced or offset
to prevent double compensation—this is known as compensation offsetting.[13]
Compensation payments under the DRC Act and the MRC
Act can also be offset by employer‑funded components of Commonwealth
superannuation payments.[14]
Effect of
disability compensation on veterans’ income support payments
The VE Act also provides means-tested income
support payments for eligible veterans and their partners/dependants. The main
payments are the Service Pension, the Income Support Supplement (for widows/widowers)
and the Veteran Payment (for those waiting for a claim for compensation for a
mental health condition under the MRC Act or DRC Act to be
processed).
The Service Pension includes a payment like the social
security Age Pension (but paid from age 60) as well as a payment like the
social security Disability Support Pension (for those whose disability prevents
them working), known as the Invalidity Service Pension.[15]
Service Pension payment rates are the same as social
security pension rates and there are similar supplementary payments (such as
the Pension Supplement, Energy Supplement and Rent Assistance).
The Service Pension, Income Support Supplement and Veteran
Payment income and assets tests are also very similar to the social security
income and assets tests with a key difference being the treatment of disability
compensation payments:
- the
Disability Pension provided under the VE Act and the SDRP under the MRC
Act are not assessed as income for the purposes of the Service Pension, Income
Support Supplement and Veteran Payment income tests
- compensation
payments for incapacity or death resulting from employment connected with a war
or war-like operations in which Australia has been engaged are not considered
income for the Service Pension or Veteran Payment income tests but are for the
Income Support Supplement income test
- compensation
payments which are for a recognised war-related condition or injury and which
have already been used to offset a Disability Pension or MRC Act payment
are exempt from the Service Pension, Veteran Payment and Income Support
Supplement income tests.[16]
Incapacity payments made under the MRC Act are
considered income for veterans’ income support payment income tests. For those
under the Age Pension age, compensation payments made under the MRC Act
or DRC Act which are not exempt income could result in their income
support payment being reduced or cancelled for a specified period.[17]
Lump sum compensation payments will be assessed under the
assets test. Lump sums held in a bank account or invested may be subject to the
deemed income rules where a percentage of the asset value is assessed under the
income support income test.[18]
Rent
Assistance
Rent Assistance is a supplementary payment for Service
Pension, Income Support Supplement and Veteran Payment recipients who pay
private rent that exceeds a certain threshold. Disability Pension and permanent
impairment payment recipients have these compensation payments taken into
account in the calculation of any Rent Assistance paid with a Service Pension,
Income Support Supplement or Veteran Payment.[19]
These disability compensation payments can reduce the Rent Assistance payable
if an individual’s compensation payment rate exceeds certain thresholds.[20]
Effect of
disability compensation payments on social security payments
Some veterans receive disability compensation payments
under the VE Act, MRC Act or DRC Act and claim social
security income support payments. Partners of veterans may also be ineligible
for a veterans’ income support payment but eligible for social security income
support.
While the social security pension income test is very
similar to the veterans’ Service Pension income test, the social security
income test does assess veterans’ disability compensation payments. The
Disability Pension under the VE Act (including Above General rates) is
treated as ordinary income.[21]
Compensation payments under the DRC Act and MRC Act are treated
in different ways:
- periodic
payments with an economic loss-component are treated as compensation and can
offset certain social security payments on a dollar-for-dollar basis[22]
- lump-sum
payments with an economic loss component can result in a period during which a
social security claimant is precluded from receiving any payment[23]
- payments
with no economic loss component may be treated as ordinary income under the
income test[24]
and
- some
specific compensation payments, such as certain payments for prisoners of war,
are excluded from assessment under the social security income test.[25]
Since 2004, social security claimants who are receiving a
Disability Pension under the VE Act, the SRDP under the MRC Act
or a permanent impairment payment under the MRC Act can receive the
Defence Force Income Support Allowance (DFISA) which tops up a person’s social
security payment rate to the level it would be if these compensation payments
were exempt from the income test assessment.
Defence Force
Income Support Allowance
The DFISA was introduced from September 2004 in response
to the 2003 Clarke Review of Veterans’ Entitlements’ recommendation that the
various veterans’ Disability Pension rates be no longer regarded as income
under the Social
Security Act 1991.[26]
The Clarke Review had found discrepancies in the level of support offered to
Disability Pension recipients who also received social security payments compared
to those who also received a Service Pension.[27]
The rate of DFISA paid is equal to the difference between
the rate of the social security pension or benefit the person actually receives
under the social security means test and the rate they would receive if the
veterans’ disability compensation payment:
- was
excluded from income in the assessment of the person’s actual rate but
- included
in the calculation of any Rent Assistance.[28]
The introduction of the DFISA was a much more complicated
solution to this issue than that proposed by the Clarke Review. As the Bills
Digest for the legislation introducing the DFISA stated:
The proposal to create this new and extra payment (that is
DFISA), creates far more complexity and cost, especially in administrative
costs, now and in the future. If disability pension were simply exempted in the
SSA [Social Security Act 1991], then only two calculations need to be
made at claim or review: one calculation of the disability pension rate under
the VEA [Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986] and a second for the income
support payment under the SSA, the second simply ignoring any disability
pension received (as is done now for the service pension paid under the VEA
which ignores any disability pension paid).[29]
Disability
Pension and compensation payment statistics
As at June 2021 there were 80,252 recipients of a Disability
Pension under the VE Act. Of these:
- 27,201
received the Special rate
- 695
received the Intermediate rate
- 3,687
received the EDA rate
- 9,595
received 100 per cent of the General rate and
- 39,074
received 10–95 per cent of the General rate.[30]
Of the 80,252 Disability Pension recipients, 39 per cent
(31,597) also received a Service Pension and three per cent (2,148) also
received a social security Age Pension.[31]
Of the 27,201 Special rate recipients, 67 per cent (18,244) also received a
Service Pension and two per cent (451) also received a social security Age
Pension.[32]
DVA data provided to the Senate Foreign Affairs, Defence
and Trade References Committee found that as at January 2021, around 68 per
cent of Special rate recipients received a Service Pension and around eight per
cent also received another income support payment.[33]
Around 25 per cent of Special rate recipients did not receive any income
support (from DVA or social security).[34]
As at March 2021, there were 27,092 veterans receiving a
permanent impairment payment under the MRC Act (either a commuted or
periodic payment) and 6,725 incapacity payment recipients. There were 17,501
veterans receiving a permanent impairment payment under the DRC Act and
2,500 incapacity payment recipients.[35]
Tune Review
of Special rate Disability Pension
Most of the measures proposed in the Bill were
recommendations of the 2019 report of the Independent Review into the TPI
Payment conducted by former Secretary of the Department of Finance, David Tune.
In April 2019, Prime Minister Scott Morrison directed the Department of the Prime
Minister and Cabinet to commission an evaluation of the Australian Federation
of Totally and Permanently Incapacitated Ex Servicemen and Women’s (TPI
Federation’s) claim that an increase in the Special rate of Disability Pension
‘is needed to remedy a downward trend in its value relative to wages since the
1950s’.[36]
The TPI Federation is an ex-service organisation representing recipients of the
Special rate of Disability Pension and the SRDP under the MRC Act.[37]
The Tune Review did not agree with the TPI Federation’s
claim:
Analysis conducted by the review, using more appropriate wage
benchmarks than used by the TPI Federation, does not support the contention
that the rate of the TPI payment has fallen against wages (regardless of
whether it is split into two components). Against some wage measures, the TPI
payment has increased in value over time. TPI veterans also have a higher net
disposable income than many veterans who work full time earning Male Total Average
Weekly Earnings (MTAWE). Veterans’ compensation is also provided under the Military
Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004 (MRCA) and the Safety,
Rehabilitation and Compensation (Defence‑related Claims) Act 1988
(DRCA). Analysis highlights that many TPI veterans receive higher payments from
Government over the course of their life than veterans compensated under the
MRCA or the DRCA.[38]
The Review recommended there be no increase in the Special
rate of Disability Pension other than normal indexation adjustments. However, the
Review found that some veterans in receipt of the Special rate had fewer
financial resources than others in the cohort and that other changes would be
beneficial (bolded in original):
-
Defence Force Income Support Allowance (DFISA) be abolished and
Disability Pension – including the TPI payment – and permanent impairment
payment under the MRCA be defined as exempt income under the social
security law. In addition, the disability income rent test should be abolished.
This would simplify payment arrangements and allow TPI veterans who
are renting to receive Commonwealth Rent Assistance.
-
Indexation of TPI payment be changed to index the whole payment at
once, rather than in two components. This could also apply to the
Intermediate and Extreme Disablement Adjustment rates of Disability Pension.
The split indexation mechanism was introduced in 2004 due to the different
indexation mechanisms in place for the General Rate and Above General Rate
(AGR) components, but it is now redundant as the indexation mechanisms were
aligned in 2008.
-
Change terminology and language in legislation, guidelines and policy
documents to no longer refer to the TPI pension as a ‘pension’ – but as a
‘payment’. Some stakeholders are concerned that the term ‘pension’ implies
welfare instead of compensation.
-
Conduct a data linkage project across agencies with the aim of
examining the long‑term wellbeing and overall outcomes for TPI veterans
and links with mainstream services. Existing data on financial resources
and Government payments provided to TPI veterans does not provide a complete
picture of the needs of TPI veterans, or their overall wellbeing.[39]
The Government accepted all the recommended changes with
measures announced in the 2020–21 Budget.[40]
Other recent
reports
2019 KPMG Review
of TPI Benefits
In 2019, DVA commissioned consulting firm KPMG to review
the concerns and recommendations of the TPI Federation and the Disabled
Veterans of Australia Network in relation to the value of the Special rate of
Disability Pension.[41]
The scope of the KPMG review was limited to ‘developing a framework’ to review
the TPI Federation’s recommendations and commenting on the proposals of the two
ex-service organisations but did not extend to providing policy recommendations
to DVA.[42]
The Review produced a framework for considering the
payment based on principles underpinning worker’s compensation and insurance
schemes. The KPMG review found that, based on the benchmarking analysis
(considering the package of support available to Special rate Disability Pension
recipients against average weekly earnings and the supports available under the
MRC Act and DRC Act), there was not strong evidence to increase
the Special rate for all TPI veterans.[43]
However, the Review did find that some Special rate recipients were worse off
than others, in particular those whose disability occurred at a young age,
those first granted the Disability Pension before 1983, and those renting.[44]
2019
Productivity Commission report on compensation and rehabilitation for veterans
In 2018, the then Treasurer, Scott Morrison, commissioned
the Productivity Commission (PC) to undertake an inquiry into the system of
compensation and rehabilitation for veterans (both serving and ex‑serving
Australian Defence Force members).[45]
The Commission’s 2019 report, A Better Way to Support
Veterans, considered the level of the Special rate of Disability Pension
and found:
… the package of compensation received by veterans on the
special rate of disability pension is reasonable. Despite strong veterans’ representation
on this issue, there is no compelling case for increasing the rate of the
pension.[46]
The PC also considered the DFISA and recommended that
payments covered by the DFISA should be made exempt from the income test for
social security income support payments, and the DFISA abolished.[47]
The PC’s comparison of disability compensation across the
three schemes over a lifetime found that the package of supports for a
recipient of the Special rate under the VE Act provided greater
assistance for an older veteran (age 50) when compared with the package of
supports available through the MRC Act and DRC Act, but a younger
veteran (age 30) would fare better with MRC Act or DRC Act
supports.[48]
2021 Senate
Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade References Committee report
On 18 March 2021, the Senate referred the issue of the
Special rate of Disability Pension to the Senate Foreign Affairs, Defence and
Trade References Committee for inquiry and report. The terms of reference
included an examination of the purpose, adequacy, structure and indexation of
the Special rate and the TPI Federation’s concerns that the value of the
Special rate had declined over time.[49]
The Committee considered the findings of the Tune, KPMG
and Productivity Commission reports, as well as the 2020–21 budget measures
announced in response to the Tune Review. Regarding the budget measures, the
Committee found that the measures, ‘while welcome, will not address the primary
concerns of the stakeholder groups who gave evidence to this inquiry’.[50]
The Committee’s report stated:
The committee believes that the TPI Federation and other
submitters have made a persuasive case for a fair and just structural increase
in the AGR [above General rate] component of the TPI Payment to help restore
the relative value of the payment and recognise and replace TPI veterans’ loss
of income.[51]
The Committee recommended the Government consider an
increase in the Special rate of Disability Pension.[52]
The Government Response to the Committee report stated:
The Government notes the Committee’s recommendation that the
Australian Government consider an increase in the TPI payment, and will take
this recommendation together with the views of the ex-service community as
presented to the Committee into account when considering future policy options
for support to TPI veterans.[53]
Committee
Consideration
At the time of writing, the Bill had not been referred to
any Committees. At meetings on 20 October 2021 and 24 November 2021, the
Senate Selection of Bills Committee deferred consideration of the Bill.[54]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills raised
issue with significant matters in Schedule 5 (the rehabilitation pilot program)
left to delegated legislation. Proposed section 53D of the MRC Act,
inserted by item 5 of Schedule 5, provides for the class of
persons eligible for the pilot program to be determined in a legislative
instrument. The Explanatory Memorandum provides no further information on who
will be included in this class of persons.
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee stated:
The committee's consistent scrutiny view is that significant
matters, such as the key details of rehabilitation programs, should be included
in primary legislation unless a sound justification for the use of delegated
legislation has been provided.
…
The committee has generally not accepted a desire for
administrative flexibility as a sufficient justification of itself for leaving
significant matters to delegated legislation.[55]
The Committee also noted that while the pilot is intended
to only run for two years, the proposed amendments do not limit the operation
of the provisions to this timeframe.[56]
The Committee requested the Minister for Veterans’ Affairs
provide more detailed advice as to:
-
why it is considered necessary and appropriate to leave the key details
of the non-liability rehabilitation pilot program to delegated legislation;
-
whether the bill could be amended to:
-
include at least high-level guidance regarding these matters on
the face of the primary legislation; and
- provide that proposed Part 2A of Chapter 3 is repealed after two
years.[57]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
At the time of writing, non-government parties and
independents had not commented directly on the Bill.
The Shadow Minister for Veterans’ Affairs and Defence
Personnel, Shayne Neumann, had previously raised the issue that most Special
rate Disability Pension recipients would not benefit from the proposed removal
of the Rent Assistance income test.[58]
Labor had also criticised the original proposed timing of the commencement of
the disability compensation measures (September 2022 rather than January 2022).[59]
Position of
major interest groups
The TPI Federation has previously welcomed the proposed
removal of the disability income test for Rent Assistance under the VE Act.
TPI Federation President Pat McCabe noted previous concerns around the timing
of the commencement of this measure had been addressed in the 2021–22 Budget:
As part of the October 2020 Federal Budget, the Government
finally agreed, after 15 years of campaigning by the TPI Federation, and as
from September 2022, to allow TPIs eligibility of the Federal Governments Rent
Assistance allowance. The TPI Federation disagreed with the length of time this
provision would take to be implemented and, as a result, as part of the May
2021 Federal Budget, this timeline was bought forward so that this initiative
could commence on the 1st January 2022.[60]
Financial
implications
The Explanatory Memorandum states that the changes
relating to disability compensation payments will cost $33.3 million over four
years. The non-liability rehabilitation program will cost $2.3 million
over four years (including the cost of an evaluation).[61]
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.[62]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights
considered the Bill in its thirteenth report of 2021 and had no comment.[63]
Key issues
and provisions
Schedule 1—Exempting
adjusted disability pension from the social security income test and removal of
Defence Force Income Support Allowance
Schedule 1 proposes to exempt certain disability pensions
paid under the VE Act and the MRC Act from the social security
income test and to remove the DFISA, which currently tops-up the rate of social
security payments affected by the inclusion of these disability pensions in the
income test.
As set out in the Background section, the DFISA is
essentially a complex method for ensuring certain disability pensions do not
affect the rate of a recipient’s social security income support payment.
Exempting these disability pensions from the income test and removing the DFISA
simplifies the arrangements but will have little to zero financial impact on affected
payment recipients.
Exempting the Disability Pension from the social security
income test was a recommendation of the 2003 Clarke Review, as well as the more
recent reports on the Special rate discussed in the Background section.[64]
How many
will be affected?
The Minister for Veterans’ Affairs, Andrew Gee, stated
that the changes will simplify payment arrangements for around 14,000 veterans
and their dependants.[65]
Key
provisions
Social
Security Act 1991
Subsection 8(8) of the Social Security Act 1991 provides
a list of amounts which are not included in the definition of ‘income’ for the
purposes of the Act. Item 21 adds to this list new subparagraph 8(8)(y)(ia)
which will provide for VE Act disability compensation payments
(currently known as Disability Pensions but the term will be amended by
Schedule 4 of the Bill) to be excluded as income under the social security
income test. Item 22 adds new subparagraph 8(8)(y)(ib) which will
provide for some saved pensions under the Veterans’
Entitlements (Transitional Provisions and Consequential Amendments) Act 1986
(grandfathered veterans’ payments which were removed by the VE Act) to
be excluded as income under the social security income test.
Items 23–24 repeal the social security income test
exemption for the DFISA as it will be abolished.
Item 25 adds new paragraphs 8(8)(zoa) and (zob)
which exclude permanent impairment payments under the MRC Act and the
SRDP under the MRC Act as income under the social security income test.
Item 27 repeals subsection 23(1D). This
subsection currently allows those whose social security payment rate is reduced
to nil as a result of them receiving a veterans’ Disability Pension (or one of
the saved pensions) or a permanent impairment payment or SRDP under the MRC
Act, to still have their social security payment considered ‘payable’ under
social security law. Having these nil-rate payments defined as payable ensures
these recipients can still access certain supplementary payments and concession
cards. As these veteran’s payments are being made exempt from the income test
and will no longer affect payment rates, this subsection is redundant.
Items 28–34 repeal various provisions relating to
the DFISA which will no longer be applicable.
Veterans’
Entitlements Act 1986
Items 43–56 remove definitions and references
relevant to the DFISA in the VE Act which will no longer be applicable.
Item 57 repeals Part VIIAB of the VE Act.
Part VIIAB provides for the payment of the DFISA.
Items 58–62 repeal redundant provisions and
references relevant to the DFISA.
Amendments
to other Acts
Items 1–20 and items 36–42 make amendments
to the A New Tax
System (Family Assistance) Act 1999, Child Support
(Assessment) Act 1989, Child Support
(Registration and Collection) Act 1988, Farm Household
Support Act 2014, Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936, Income Tax
Assessment Act 1997 and the Social Security
(Administration) Act 1999 to make amendments consequential to the amendments
to the Social Security Act 1991 and the VE Act. The changes
primarily remove redundant references to the DFISA or provisions relating to
the DFISA from these Acts.
Schedule
2—Increased rent assistance
Schedule 2 proposes to remove the disability income test
which can reduce the level of Rent Assistance payable under the VE Act
to those in receipt of Disability Pension or a permanent impairment payment
under the MRC Act. The test effectively lowers the level of Rent
Assistance available to those receiving higher rates of disability
compensation.
Rent Assistance is a supplementary payment available to
income support recipients (such as Service Pension, Income Support Supplement
or Veteran Payment recipients) who rent privately. The rate of rent payable must
exceed a certain threshold with rates of Rent Assistance related to the level
of rent paid, up to a maximum. The disability income test affects those
receiving Rent Assistance with a DVA income support payment. There is no
similar test applicable to those receiving Rent Assistance with a social
security income support payment. However, the DFISA does not currently cover
any Rent Assistance reduced under the social security income test.[66]
The 2003 Clarke Review had recommended removing the
disability income test for Rent Assistance, as did the 2019 Tune Review.[67]
The Tune Review noted the impact of the disability income test:
The effect of the disability income rent test is that the
greater the veteran’s impairment, the less rent assistance is payable. A TPI
veteran is unable to receive any rent assistance because the disability income
rent test reduces the rate of rent assistance payable to nil. The disability
income rent test can also result in Service Pension recipients being paid a
lower income support payment than if they were paid age Pension [sic].[68]
DVA states that the reason Disability Pension and
permanent impairment compensation recipients have their rate of Rent Assistance
reduced is to target that supplementary payment at those with limited means:
People whose rent assistance is affected by their rate of
disability pension or the amount of permanent impairment compensation are not
considered to be entirely dependent on their income support pension or veteran
payment.[69]
The amendments in Schedule 2 will mean that veterans
eligible for Rent Assistance under the VE Act will not have their rate
of Rent Assistance affected by their Disability Pension or permanent impairment
payment.
How many
will benefit?
The Minister for Veterans’ Affairs Andrew Gee stated that
around 6,900 veterans and their dependants will benefit from the removal of the
disability income test for Rent Assistance.[70]
Key
provisions
Items 6–12 of Schedule 2 to the Bill amend or
repeal relevant points in the Rent Assistance rate calculator at Schedule 6 to
the VE Act that apply to those who receive a pension by way of
compensation (Disability Pension, permanent impairment payments under the MRC
Act and the SRDP). The amendments will mean that these payments will no longer
affect an individual’s rate of Rent Assistance.
Schedule
3—Removing references to Disability Pension
Schedule 3 proposes to amend some references to the term ‘disability
pension’ in the VE Act where it is used to refer to Disability Pension
and War Widow’s/er’s Pension (WWP). Amended references will instead refer to
the term ‘pension by way of compensation’.
The Tune Review found that some veterans’ compensation
payment recipients were concerned that ‘the word “pension” implies welfare as
opposed to compensation’.[71]
The Tune Review noted that the term ‘pension’ is not used solely for payments
provided as ‘welfare’ but can also be used to describe other forms of regular
income such as periodic payments from superannuation.[72]
The Tune Review noted that the Special rate of Disability Pension was a form of
compensation but differed from other forms of compensation such as the DVA Gold
Card or lump sum payments in that it was paid at intervals (as a pension).[73]
However, the Tune Review recognised the concerns from
stakeholders over the use of the word pension and recommended that the term
‘TPI payment’ be used instead of ‘TPI pension’ in legislation, policy
guidelines and related material.[74]
Rationale
for the proposed amendments
Minister Gee stated the amendments ‘clarify that these
payments are compensation and will reduce the potential for the payment to be
confused with Department of Social Services disability support pensions’.[75]
The Minister suggests there is the potential for confusion between VE Act’s
Disability Pension and the social security Disability Support Pension. However,
no evidence was put forward by the Government suggesting widespread confusion. It
would seem more likely that the terminology risks confusion between different VE
Act pensions, such as the means-tested Invalidity Service Pension and the
non-means-tested Disability Pension. The term ‘pension’ has been used for veterans’
compensation payments for more than a century, preceding the introduction of
the Service Pension.[76]
The concerns put forward in the Tune Review suggest that
the issue for stakeholders is that the word ‘pension’ suggests the payment is a
‘welfare payment’, with welfare considered a pejorative term. It is unclear how
widespread this view of the word ‘pension’ is—as the Tune Review pointed out,
pension is commonly used to refer to regular payments outside the social
security system such as superannuation pensions.
Amendments
do not remove most references to pensions
The proposed amendments do not actually remove most
references to the term ‘pension’ in relation to Disability Pension in the VE
Act. Rather, the amendments add a qualifier, ‘pension by way of
compensation’ to some headings and some references to compensation pensions
generally.
The Explanatory Memorandum notes the amendments implement
the Tune Review’s recommendation to some extent:
… including clarifying the nature of pension by way of
compensation, rather than by means of welfare. This will also be captured in
guidelines and policy documents.
However, the word “pension” has not been removed throughout
the VEA. It is important to recognise that it is not only the Commonwealth that
provides benefits to veterans and their dependants. Various State, Territory
and local government laws and regulations also provide for benefits and
discounts for veterans and their families. These laws and regulations refer to
veterans and their families in a variety of different ways, including referring
to “pensions under the VEA”. Similarly, private businesses and charities may
target “pensioners”. There is a risk that removing the word “pension” could
mean these benefits and discounts would no longer flow to veterans and their
families.[77]
The Government’s concern is that some compensation pension
recipients might miss out on other benefits if the term ‘pension’ was removed
altogether.
The proposed amendments do not actually address the
recommendation of the Tune Review to remove the term ‘pension’. They remove
legislative references to ‘Disability Pension’ but retain the term ‘pension’ in
describing these compensation payments.
Key
provisions
Item 1 of Schedule 3 amends the definition of
‘adjusted income’ at subsection 5H(1) of the VE Act to substitute
the reference to ‘disability pension’ as defined at subsection 5Q(1) with a reference
to:
a payment to the person that is a payment in respect of
incapacity or death resulting from employment in connection with a war or
war-like operations in which the Crown has been engaged, other than:
- a pension under
Part II or IV (other than a pension that is payable under section 30
to a dependant of a deceased veteran); or
- a pension payable
because of subsection 4(6) or (8B) of the Veterans’ Entitlements
(Transitional Provisions and Consequential Amendments) Act 1986 (other
than a pension payable in respect of a child).
This is because the definition of ‘disability pension’ at subsection
5Q(1) is being repealed by item 3.
Item 2 also substitutes a reference to a
‘disability pension payable to a person under Part 2 or Part 4’ at paragraph
5H(8)(ea) with a reference to ‘a pension payable to the person under Part
II or IV’. Paragraph 5H(8)(ea) excludes from the definition of ‘income’ under
the VE Act certain compensation payments that affect the rate of a
Disability Pension paid under Part II or IV (see ‘Offsetting’ section above). Parts
II and IV of the VE Act also provide for compensation payments other
than the Disability Pension, including payments to the dependants of deceased
veterans (War Widow’s/er’s Pension and Orphan’s Pension).[78]
Removing the reference to Disability Pension slightly changes the effect of
paragraph 5H(8)(ea) so that compensation payments that reduce Disability
Pension and/or pensions for dependants such as the War Widow’s/er’s Pension as excluded
income under the VE Act.
Item 4 replaces the current heading for Part II of
the VE Act—'Pensions, other than service
pensions, for veterans and their dependants’—with the new heading: ‘Pensions by way of compensation to veterans and their dependants’.
Item 5 makes a similar change to the heading of Division 2 of Part II to
replace the current heading—‘Eligibility for pension’—with the new heading:
‘Eligibility for pensions by way of compensation to veterans
and their dependants’.
Item 7 makes a similar amendment as item 2
at paragraph 52Z(3A)(da) with similar effect of expanding the scope of
the provision to include compensation payments that affect all pensions under
Part II and IV of the VE Act, including those for dependants.
Items 8–12 substitute various references to
‘disability pension’ or ‘pensions’ with references to ‘pensions by way of
compensation’.
Section 98A of the VE Act deals with bereavement
payment in respect of partnered disabled veterans. Item 13 amends paragraph
98A(1)(b) to substitute the term ‘disability pension’, with ‘a pension
under Part II or IV (other than a pension payable to a person as a
dependant of a deceased veteran)’.
Items 14–22 amend various other references to
‘disability pension’ in section 98A and the heading for section 98AA—these
sections currently provide for bereavement payments where a Disability Pension
recipient has died. While the term ‘Disability Pension’ will no longer appear,
the term ‘pension’ will continue to be used.
Schedule
4—Indexation of Above General rates
Different veterans’ payment rates are adjusted in
different ways to maintain their value over time via the process known as
indexation. Currently, the Service Pension is indexed in the same way as the
Age Pension and other social security pensions by adjusting in line with price
indexes with a minimum benchmark rate set as a percentage of average wages.
Veterans’ Disability Pension, War Widow’s/er’s Pension and Veteran Payment are
not indexed in the same way as the Service Pension but the methodology is
linked to the Service Pension rate. A number of supplementary payments are
indexed to the Consumer Price Index (CPI).
The separate Disability Pension rates are currently
indexed separately. That is, the General rate and each of the three Above
General rates are all adjusted separately. Schedule 4 proposes to simplify this
process so that the Above General rates are adjusted in the same way as the
General rate. The change will have minimal impact on how payment rates are
calculated.
Indexation
of the Service Pension
The Service Pension is indexed twice each year (on 20
March and 20 September) by the greater of the movement in the CPI or the
Pensioner and Beneficiary Living Cost Index (PBLCI).[79]
Rates are then benchmarked against a percentage of Male Total Average Weekly
Earnings (MTAWE).[80]
The combined couple rate is benchmarked to 41.76 per cent of MTAWE; the single
rate of pension is set at 66.33 per cent of the combined couple rate (which is
equal to around 27.7 per cent of MTAWE).[81]
‘Benchmarked’ means that after it has been indexed, the combined couple rate is
checked to see whether it is equal to or higher than 41.76 per cent of MTAWE.
If the rate is lower than this percentage, the rates are increased to the
appropriate benchmark level.
The CPI is a measure of changes in the prices paid by
households for a fixed basket of goods and services. Adjusting (or indexing)
payment rates in line with movements in the CPI, maintains their ‘real’ value
over time, in the sense that the payment should be able to purchase the same
amount of goods and services over time. The PBLCI is another method for
measuring changes in costs. It is different from the CPI in that, instead of
measuring changing prices in a fixed basket of goods as experienced by the
general population, it measures the effect of changes in prices of the
out-of-pocket living expenses experienced by age pensioner and other households
whose main source of income is a government payment.[82]
The use of the MTAWE benchmark serves a different purpose
from indexation generally, it ‘is not intended to maintain the value of pensions
relative to costs; rather, it is seen as ensuring pensioners maintain a certain
standard of living, relative to the rest of the population’.[83]
The current indexation method took effect from 20
September 2009.[84]
Prior to this date, the service pension was indexed to CPI or benchmarked to 25
per cent of MTAWE (for the single rate).[85]
Indexation
of compensation payments
Disability Pension, the War Widow’s/er’s Pension and
Veteran Payment are also indexed twice each year, according to movements in the
Maximum Basic
Rate (MBR) factor.[86]
The MBR factor is a measure of the change in the single Service Pension rate.
This means that the Disability Pension and other compensation payments are
indirectly indexed to movements in the CPI or PBLCI, and to MTAWE changes.
The MBR factor equals:
- current
‘not a member of a couple’ Service Pension MBR amount (after it has been
indexed and/or benchmarked) divided by the
- previous
‘not a member of a couple’ MBR amount, worked out to three decimal places.
For example, the MBR Factor for 20 September 2021 would be
worked out using this formula: $22,937.20 (annual rate as at 20 September 2021)
÷ $22,575.80 (the annual rate prior to 20 September 2021) = 1.016 (MBR
factor).[87]
To apply the MBR factor, the relevant Disability Pension
rates on 19 September 2021 were multiplied by the MBR factor (that is, 1.016)
and rounded up to the nearest ten cents to arrive at the new rates. On 20
September 2021, the 100% General rate increased from $513.10 to $521.40 per
fortnight.[88]
The formula results in a simple proportional rate increase. This only occurs
where multiplying the current rate by the MBR factor would result in a higher
rate than adjustment in line with movements in the CPI.
Each of the Above General rates are adjusted by the MRB
factor separately.[89]
The 100% General rate for the day before indexation is deducted from the total
amount payable to an Above General rate payment recipient to isolate the Above
General rate component. This is then multiplied by the MBR Factor and rounded
up to the nearest ten cents. This indexed amount is then added to the new,
indexed 100% General rate to equal the total amount payable to an Above General
rate recipient.
The War Widow’s/er’s Pension is also divided into
components and adjusted separately—one part is set equal to the Service Pension
rate, one part is adjusted by the MBR Factor, and one part is adjusted by
CPI-only indexation.[90]
Changes to
Disability Pension indexation
Prior to March 2004, the Disability Pension was indexed to
CPI only (CPI indexation began in 1976). Changes were made in response to the
Clarke Report so that, from March 2004, the General rate Disability Pension
continued to be adjusted in line with CPI movements but Above General rate
payments were indexed to the MBR factor (only the components of these Above
General rates that were above the 100% General rate were indexed to the MBR
factor).[91]
In July 2007, the Special and Intermediate rates of Disability
Pension received ad hoc increases of $50 and $25 per fortnight respectively.[92]
From March 2008 the indexation method changed again, and
all Disability Pension rates were adjusted by the MBR Factor (so indirectly to
CPI or MTAWE).[93]
The General rate, EDA rate and non-indexed component of the War Widow’s/er’s Pension
also received a one-off increase at the same time as this indexation change.[94]
As the Tune Review noted, the different components of the Disability
Pension (the General rate and the Above General rates (Special, EDA and
Intermediate) are still adjusted separately but all use the MBR Factor.[95]
Proposed
change
Schedule 4 proposes to simplify the way Above General
rates of Disability Pension are indexed. Rather than using the formula whereby
the Above General rates component is separated from the 100% General rate to be
indexed separately, one formula for adjusting the total amount payable to an
Above General rate recipient will be used. The formula will adjust the total
amount by the relevant MBR Factor rounded up to the nearest ten cents.
As the Explanatory Memorandum notes, the changes will mean
that rounding only occurs for one amount, not two as currently occurs.[96]
This could mean that indexation increases on some dates will be up to ten cents
lower than if adjusted according to the current method. This means that Above
General rates could be slightly lower in the future than if the current formula
was maintained.
Item 1 of Schedule 4 repeals and substitutes proposed
subsection 198(5E) which provides for the new simplified formula for
adjusting Above General rates.
Schedule 5—Non-liability
rehabilitation pilot
In the 2021–22 Budget, the Government announced a two-year
pilot program to allow veterans with vocational and psychosocial rehabilitation
needs to access services and support without requiring them to have lodged a
compensation claim.[97]
The pilot program is in response to Recommendation 6.3 of the Productivity
Commission’s 2019 report which said that consideration should be given ‘to
providing rehabilitation on a non-liability basis across the interval from ADF
[Australian Defence Force] service to determination of claims post-service’.[98]
The program will cost $2.3 million over four years
including the cost of an evaluation.[99]
Minister Gee stated that the measure ‘aims to encourage
and enable access to voluntary rehabilitation for 100 veterans for each of the
two years of the pilot’.[100]
Key
provisions
Item 5 inserts the substantive provisions allowing
for the pilot program in the form of new Part 2A of Chapter 3 of the MRC
Act. The provisions provide for a rehabilitation program to be provided to
members or former members of the ADF who meet eligibility criteria.
Individuals will be eligible for the pilot program if:
- they
are a current member of the ADF or a former member of the ADF (provided they
were a member at any time on or after 1 December 1988) and
- they
have not made a claim for liability for an injury or disease related to their
service under paragraph 319(1)(a) of the MRC Act
- they
are in a class of persons determined by the Military Rehabilitation and
Compensation Commission[101]
(the Commission) for the purposes of the pilot via a legislative instrument
made under new section 53D (the Explanatory Memorandum does not provide
further detail on what class of persons will be determined via this instrument)
and
- the
Commission has determined, in writing, that this part of the MRC Act
applies to the person.
The rehabilitation program will be delivered through an
approved provider and must consist of vocational assessment and rehabilitation
and/or psycho-social training.[102]
Conditions and limits (including financial limits) for any such program are to
be set out in a legislative instrument.[103]
New subsection 53C(5) provides that section 38 of
the MRC Act does not apply in relation to the pilot program. Section 38
sets out the aim of rehabilitation:
The aim of rehabilitation is to maximise the potential to
restore a person who has an impairment, or an incapacity for service or work,
as a result of an injury or disease to at least the same physical and
psychological state, and at least the same social, vocational and educational status,
as he or she had before the injury or disease.[104]
The Explanatory Memorandum states that the reason section
38 does not apply in relation to this pilot is due to ‘the shorter duration and
targeted nature of the pilot and that it will not be aiming to achieve the same
outcome as the full rehabilitation services usually provided’.[105]