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Budget: Inflation drives rise in cost of pensions and payments

Treasurer Jim Chalmers.

The budget pays for the largest indexation increase to payments in more than 30 years for allowances and the largest in 12 years for pensions, writes MICHELLE GRATTAN.

TUESDAY’S budget will point to a slowing Australian economy, with growth forecasts cut, and contain more than $21 billion of savings and decisions to redirect spending.

Delivered against a background of rising inflation, increasing interest rates and huge global uncertainties, Treasurer Jim Chalmers’

Michelle Grattan.

first budget will also contain $32.8 billion in extra funding over four years for pensions and payments compared to the April Pre-election Economic and Fiscal Outlook (PEFO) forecasts.

The budget pays for the largest indexation increase to payments in more than 30 years for allowances and the largest in 12 years for pensions.

High inflation and changing economic parameters account for this huge rise social security payments.

Spending on social security payments in 2022-23 is set to be $120.1 billion. This is an increase of $3.1 billion since PEFO.

The breakdown of social security payments in 2022-23, with increases compared to PEFO forecasts, is:

  • Job Seeker payments: $14.3 billion for 2022-23 – an increase of $1.5 billion and $10.6 billion over four years
  • Support for seniors/age pension: $55.3 billion for 2022-23, an increase of $1.1 billion in 2022-23 and $11.8 billion four years
  • Family assistance payments: $20.5 billion for 2022-23, an increase of $4.4 billion over four years
  • Financial Support for Carers: $10.6 billion for 2022-23, an increase of $0.8 billion in 2022-23 and $2.5 billion four years
  • Financial Support for people with Disability: $19.5 billion for 2022-23, an increase of $0.4 billion in 2022-23 and $3.5 billion four years.

The budget will show the forecast for Australia’s real GDP growth has been downgraded to 3.25% for 2022-23, which is a quarter of a percentage point lower than the forecast in PEFO.

Growth for 2023-24 is forecast to be a low 1.5%, one percentage point lower than PEFO.

The slowdown is expected to be primarily driven by weaker household consumption growth, as a result of increasing interest rates and cost of living pressures.



Chalmers doesn’t expect the Australian economy to go into recession, despite the slides in key economies overseas.

Labor campaigned strongly in the election on lifting real wages, but circumstances have pushed that prospect into the distance.

Chalmers told the ABC: “Real wages were falling behind before the election and they’ve been falling since the election. That’s because inflation is higher for longer as a consequence of the war in Ukraine, natural disasters and issues in our own supply chains here at home, and also a consequence of a decade of wage stagnation”.

He said on “current treasury forecasts, inflation will persist for longer than we’d like, and wages growth, which is beginning to happen in our economy, will cross over with inflation some time we think the year after next”.

Chalmers said the budget would be “family-friendly”, recognising “that our pressures on the economy come from around the world, but they’re felt around the kitchen table”.

It would be responsible, sensible and suited to the times “because when you’ve got all of this uncertainty around the world, the best possible response is a responsible budget at home”.

On the savings side, $6.5 billion has been found from what the government describes as “re-profiling of infrastructure projects to better align the investment with construction market conditions”.

Some $3.6 billion is saved from reducing spending on external labour, advertising, travel and legal expenses.

More than $2 billion has been cut from a range of grants programs.

Savings have been identified across government agencies. But the government says this is just the “first phase” of its spending audit, with more savings to be found in future budgets.

With regional programs set to be hit, shadow treasurer Angus Taylor told the ABC said he’d just spent eight days cycling through regional NSW and “a lot of those regional infrastructure investments are paying back in spades right now. We’re seeing incredible resilience and robustness.”

Apart from the budget, the resumption of parliament this week will see the introduction of the government’s industrial relations legislation for multi-employer bargaining, which is running into business opposition.

In a statement on Friday the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the Business Council of Australia and the Australian Industry Group said the planned changes “raise the risk of higher unemployment, increased strike action and damage to our economic security”.

The groups said the government should “slow down and consult more widely and more meaningfully”.The Conversation

Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra. This article is republished from The Conversation.

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Michelle Grattan

Michelle Grattan

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11 Responses to Budget: Inflation drives rise in cost of pensions and payments

Nancy watts says: 24 October 2022 at 11:49 pm

I feel that the age pensioners are always left behind as us pensioners gets to recieve a lower bonus or pension rise then the job seekers, there are a lot of young people out there that don’t want to work as job seekers money is high enough so why do they need to find jobs,iv worked all my life and paid my taxes now I’m too old and can’t work cause of my heart attack,the money I recieve on the age pension just pays my bills and rent not much left for food to be put on my table,,us pensioners deserve better money then what we are recieving at the moment,,As $20/$30/or $50 extra isn’t going to cut it with high inflation,Petrol,Food,Rent ,Bills,,,,Please help us age pensioners to be able to lead some sort of life that we have left,Thank You

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Keith Williamson says: 25 October 2022 at 1:58 pm

my 32 year old grandson 6 feet 2 and 118 kg Never worked 1 hour in his life. Will he get a pay rise.? If so Why?

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Adam says: 26 October 2022 at 5:50 am

Not everyone on payments is like that some of us don’t have a choice for many other reasons , its not as simple as there’s a job do it employers are extremely picky nowadays and if you have just one word out of place on your resume , it wont even get to be viewed by an employer , unfortunately this world is becoming stupid insane there is thousands out there that are stuck on a hook because the gov bitch and complain about reskilling but they don’t pay enough for people to do any courses and the courses they do fund don’t suit everyone mostly silly office workers not many courses are funded for things that actually work in real life situations like construction and mechanical etc etc , the stats the government show on tv and in paper don’t show all these details.

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Brittany Taylor says: 25 October 2022 at 6:21 pm

Most Jobseekers are either mums that have a child over the age of 5… or disabled or elderly that cant get DSP because of the massive change to the Table in 2016… you need to have 20 points in one area of the table say physical and most… unlike me can only manage 16… this isnt to say they arent disabled but the system is broken…

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Amy McManus says: 25 October 2022 at 9:03 pm

I agree with everything you’ve said Nancy I have often wondered why job seekers receive rise not like they are interested in working, I am 76 and been tax payer for years, everyday living is a struggle and my dr no longer has bulk billing so that’s another extra living expense..

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Gary Haley says: 25 October 2022 at 4:10 pm

This is the old, old storey, promises, promises but NO date of fixation, or when, just fairy dust for the un-educated to think that the truth is being told for an election win. After the win SORRY, WE WERNT TOLD THE TRUTH, better luck next time. …… BUT! I possibly won’t be alive next time, but politicians will have retired on 1st term of office payments plus perks and pleasures. …….. NOW WHY! HAVE I NOT GOT, THE CONTACT No OF GOD. ………. If the Gov. of the day, DO NOT! wake up to the internet social behaviour, instead of say good morning how are you, meeting others, I guess it will be, stick em up your money or your life. aaaaaahh the almighty $$ or is it fairy paper for cutouts, if you can afford the cissors. Wakey, Wakey, time flies, you may wind up as Solent Green.

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Linda says: 25 October 2022 at 8:21 pm

There are so many jobs out there & as far as I’m concerned anyone receiving job seeker payments. Should be on a time limit & should they not get a job or refuse to work, then they lose their payments. There are so many who just squander tax payer money on drugs & alcohol & still steal from others. A slap on the wrist will do apparently but more time rehabilitating in jail or centres makes more sense.

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Mick K says: 26 October 2022 at 7:10 pm

Im on dsp its the same as a pensioner its not enough at under $90 a day when rent costs you $60 a day it obviously needs to be adjusted to at least $120 a day..
cost of rent is insane at around $400pw for a cheap house or apartment and that should be 30% of your wage so $800 pf then another 70% is needed ontop of that so you can even get approved for a house otherwise its regarded as rent stress by there own admissions that would be over $2600 a fortnight needed to not live in complete poverty.
us pensioners can only dream of that happening!
$1178 – 30% is just over $800 so im paying just over 70% of my dsp pension on rent.

job seeker isnt enough either, these people on the pension saying job seeker gets to much couldnt live off it so i dont understand why thay think job keeper shouldnt get a measly indexation rise is beyond me.
Considering half the people on job seeker are dissabled and cant get approved for dsp because the system is made so people cant get it,i was born in a wheelchair have 20 points just for my feet but took me 7yrs to get approved cause i had to get a doctor to sign me off. Most doctors dont want to know about dsp forms makes it pretty hard to get approved,grinds my gears when people scam it and claim dsp for depression and other crap

JOB SEEKER you cant be expected to live of under $50 a day and retrain,study or start a small business to get ahead in life so you can get off payments in the future.
job seeker should get what pensioners get and dsp and pensioners need $500 pf raise minimum!
Whats $30 a fortnight or $2 a day raise next march for pensioners going to do for anybody what a joke.
I thought labor would actually do something to improve the poverty situation with all albos talk of growing up in housing commision this nobody left behind business is utter crap.
Getting a housing commission house is a sad dream at this stage got better luck winning the lotto.

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Andrew Cooper says: 26 October 2022 at 9:53 pm

How much will payments going up for cost of living trying to make money stretch on dsp is very hard medical costs can take thousands of dollars of me will probably have to disconnect broadband. And using the money for utilities bills

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