Robodebt 2.0: Labor moves to hit the unemployed for debts caused by system failures

July 4, 2022
Issue 
Campaigners outside Tony Burke's office on July 1. Photo: Antipoverty Centre/Facebook

The ultimate issue with Robodebt, the former Coalition government鈥檚 illegal automated debt collecting scheme, was the human cost: the harming of so many struggling to survive on the pittance that is doled out as social security benefits and, in some cases,听people committed suicide.

Robodebt was launched by former social services minister Christian Porter听in . The Online Compliance Intervention replaced manual debt collecting with an automatic computer program that matched the Australian Taxation Organisation and听听databases in an effort to detect payment discrepancies.

This system raised what was previously 20,000 debt notices a year to 20,000 a week. It soon became clear it was producing false debts and, although it is unknown how many can be attributed to the scheme,听听died over 28 months to October 2018.

This is the context in which new social services minister Amanda Rishworth announced听on that the department will go ahead with a new debt-collecting system because, due to Coalition mismanagement, 17% of JobSeeker payments over the last two to three years were, apparently, incorrect.

Despite Prime Minister Anthony Albanese highlighting his understanding of听what it鈥檚 like to , government services minister Bill Shorten said the government has 鈥渁 responsibility to take steps to recover debts owing, and therefore, efforts to recover existing debts will need to recommence鈥.

听spokesperson Kristin O鈥機onnell said: 鈥淭his looks an awful lot like Robodebt 2.0, because the problem with Robodebt was not ... that they messed up the calculations, the problem was with how it affects people鈥檚 lives when they are living below the poverty line.

鈥淥n a very low income, they received a debt that they could not afford to pay,鈥 she told. 鈥淭hat has consequences, like people skipping meals. We know from experience that sometimes they feel they had no option other than suicide.鈥

O'Connell听said successive governments have for decades used 鈥渁ggressive debt collecting tactics in order to make budget savings off the poor鈥. The fallout from Robodebt heightened the awareness around the harms of this practice.

Through no fault of their own, some recipients, surviving on below poverty line payments and trying to find a job, have been overpaid. Yet they are to be hit up for this debt, some of which has been accumulating over three years.

Unemployment by design

In听, the Australian government uses the non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment, the NAIRU, a level of unemployment that鈥檚 necessary to avoid inflation. The Reserve Bank factors the NAIRU into its monetary policy settings.

A certain amount of unemployment is, according to this theory, desirable to keep the economy buoyant.

Yet, despite factoring in a necessary level of out-of-work constituents, successive federal governments have continued to keep the unemployment rate at a pitiful level 鈥 currently it sits at听. By contrast,听听for a single adult.

鈥淕overnments design unemployment into the system. They use unemployed people as economic fodder to keep down wages and ensure that they鈥檙e managing inflation,鈥 O鈥機onnell said.

鈥淗owever, it doesn鈥檛 actually reflect the reality of what drives inflation. So we have people being punished for something that鈥檚 not their fault, but is actually by design.鈥

Debilitating obligations

The Labor government is overseeing a new points-based mutual obligation scheme for those on JobSeeker, crafted by the previous Scott Morrison government.

Workforce Australia involves a system of job-seeking activities a welfare recipient must do to accumulate 100 points a month to ensure their payments are not docked or cut off. This is despite the fact that such schemes are known to hinder finding work.

Advocates have called for the system to be scrapped or paused. But employment minister Tony Burke听听that as $7 billion worth of contracts were finalised by the previous government, it had to start听.

O鈥機onnell said the minister misrepresented what had been asked: a suspension of sanctions for at least three, if not six, months. This is because the evidence shows it takes time for people to understand new systems.

Burke is only willing to allow a one-month grace period.

鈥淟abor supports programs that force unemployed people to do activities that don鈥檛 help them,鈥 O鈥機onnell said. 鈥淏ut what [Burke] can do is something extremely simple: he can make sure that as a result of people having to learn a new system, they will not be penalised.鈥

鈥楧ole bludger鈥 bashing

Rishworth said the government has found out how badly the Coalition mismanaged the welfare system. A large number of the more than 805,000 people on JobSeeker have been overpaid and, despite this being no fault of their own, they must pay it back.

The obvious question is why it continues to hound these people, who are currently living way below the poverty line, for relatively small amounts of overpaid money when many of the听听and听听avoid paying any tax at all.

O鈥機onnell set out an alternative path the government could take, rather than shackle the unemployed with immediate debts. It would involve them not having to pay back any debts until after they are employed in a similar way to student loans. It could also correct its system to avoid overpaying people.

O'Connell said the legacy of Robodebt is that many recipients have still not received justice, despite听. This is because it was settled out of court, meaning that the case against the scheme was never made.

鈥淲e will see more of the same. We will see more people hurt by debt collection practices,鈥 O鈥機onnell said.

鈥淏ut there is something that will be different about this 鈥 we will not be able to find out at a later date exactly who was hurt, as these debts will presumably not be deemed unlawful.鈥

[Reprinted with permission from .]

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