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Estelle Jones
Kirby Institute Communications Officer
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UNSW Sydney and ACOSS Poverty and Inequality Partnership haveĀ released a new report to mark the start of Anti-Poverty Week. Tracking income support in Australia since 2000, the study has found the income gap between the unemployed and sole parents, and the broader community is widening.

The report, , says median household incomes have grown 45 per cent since June 2000, and the Age Pension and Disability Support Pension (DSP) have almost kept pace. But while payments have increased for some groups, other groups ā€“ particularly the unemployed and sole parents ā€“ have been left behind. Ā 

Scientia Professor Carla Treloar, Director of the Social Policy Research (SPRC) and the Centre for Social Research in Health (CSRH) at UNSW, said there is a clear discrepancy between different forms of income support. Ā Ā 

ā€œThis research poses serious questions about Australiaā€™s income support system. If itā€™s good enough for the Age Pension to keep pace with broader income growth, we need to ask why the same principle doesnā€™t apply to support for the unemployed and sole parents,ā€ she said.

The DSP has the same base payment rate as the Age Pension, so single DSP recipients benefited from a substantial increase in 2009. However, due to eligibility constraints, not all people living with a disability benefited. People with a partial capacity to work who received unemployment payments ā€“ rather than, for example, the DSP ā€“ increased from 5 per cent in 2007 to 33 per cent in 2021. Eligibility constraints also affected sole parents.

ā€œA series of policy changes have seen many single parents moved to lower payment categories, such as JobSeeker, over the past two decades. As a result, the after-tax income of single parents receiving income support payments has plummeted since 2006,ā€ Professor Treloar said.

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Dr Cassandra Goldie, CEO of ACOSS, said people receiving unemployment and single parent income support payments have been badly cast adrift.

ā€œThose doing it toughest have been held further behind, making it that much harder to look after their health and families, as well as participate in the workforce. Ā 

ā€œApart from the brief period when the Coronavirus Supplement was paid, the performance of the income support system during this period of robust economic growth has left whole groups of people further and further behind the rest of the community.ā€

Key findings in the report

  • From June 2000 to 2021, Australiaā€™s median household income has grown by 45 per cent in real terms, and the minimum wage has risen by 23.5 per cent.
  • Over the same period, the single Age Pension rose by 52 per cent.
  • Payments for sole parents with a child under eight have risen by 27.2 per cent, while payments for those with children over eight increased by just 7.9 per cent over the 20-year period.
  • Since 2000, the unemployment payment rate has fallen in comparison with the minimum wage (from 50 per cent down to 41 per cent of replacement value), apart from the period when the Coronavirus Supplement was paid.
  • The number of people receiving the lower unemployment payment who have a partial capacity to work ā€“ who may have previously been eligible for the DSP ā€“ has increased from 5 per cent in 2007 to 33 per cent in 2021.
  • The number of sole parents receiving the lower unemployment payment, JobSeeker, has increased from 0 per cent in 2000 to 28 per cent in 2021.
  • The payment rate of the Age Pension and the DSP is much higher than JobSeeker when compared with the minimum wage.

Australian Income Support Since 2000: Those Left Behind is the second report in the UNSW Sydney and ACOSS Poverty and Inequality COVID-19 Build Back Fairer series. The purpose of the series is to help us understand the different aspects of change, and who is most badly affected by the pandemic. The analysed the changes to income support arrangements for people in different locations across Australia during the pandemic, from September 2019 to September 2021.