The released the statement below on June 26.
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The National Welfare Rights Network welcomes today鈥檚 news that the Senate has voted to support an Australian Green鈥檚 initiated inquiry into the adequacy of Newstart Allowance and related payments for young people and students.
鈥淚t鈥檚 about time that we dragged our system of income support for unemployed Australian鈥檚 into the 21st century,鈥 said Maree O鈥橦alloran, President of the National Welfare Rights Network. 鈥淚f we don鈥檛 act now, unemployment benefits will be just 11% of the average wage by the middle of this century.鈥
鈥淭he existing income support arrangements for unemployed Australians are not just failing to meet the needs of those out of work, but they are also failing our economy.
鈥淔ar too many people are languishing on inadequate benefits and with insufficient support to help them into sustainable employment. With the current rate of Newstart falling in comparison to average wages, the minimum wage and $133 a week below the austere rate of pension there is little merit in the argument that a payment of just $35 a day is a disincentive to work.
鈥淲e are pleased that the inquiry is looking into job seekers interaction with agencies such as Centrelink.
鈥淚t is sensible that the inquiry is looking at Centrelink overpayments which can operate as a disincentive to work and take a job. Newstart is not just inadequate, it鈥檚 also a debt trap for many, because of the way the income reporting rules work. These problems are connected to the growth in the casualised workforce with people juggling multiple employers and having to calculate earnings from different sources.
鈥淎nother major concern is the way the income support system works and the structure of income reporting 鈥 you have to report earnings when earned even if they have not yet been received.
鈥淭his makes it often impossible for a person to report within the 14 days required by Centrelink. Because they don鈥檛 get paid, have no income, yet their allowance is reduced.
鈥淭he allowable earnings threshold of just $31 for Newstart which has been increased by just $1 in over 30 years, needs to be examined. The indexation of benefits only to the Consumer Price Index means that the gap between payments continues to grow. This is especially a problem for young people on Youth Allowance which is increased only once a year.鈥
鈥淎s more and more people are being pushed onto lower-payment allowances by a Government that wants to cut costs, it鈥檚 critical that the issue of payment adequacy is addressed.鈥