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Liberals won’t stand in the way of welfare rise: Dutton

The will support the government’s planned $40 increase to JobSeeker. (Julian Smith/AAP PHOTOS)

By Maeve Bannister and Dominic Giannini in Canberra

WELFARE recipients will soon receive an extra $40 a fortnight and could potentially be allowed to work more hours without losing their benefits. 

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has clarified the coalition won’t stand in the way of a rise for welfare payments, but will push for changes to increase incentives to work.

The government announced the welfare payment increase in the May budget.

The opposition’s proposed change would maintain the current rate and allow JobSeeker recipients to take home $300 a fortnight, instead of $150, while still receiving full benefits.

Mr Dutton said while the money budgeted for the increase could be better spent on a model that allowed people to work more hours, the Liberals would not oppose it. But he did not expect the coalition’s proposal would be supported in parliament.

“Ultimately if that goes down – as we suspect it will, unfortunately because I think it’s good policy – then we’ll support the government’s increase of $40,” he told reporters in Canberra.

Mr Dutton said a Liberal-National government would not repeal the rate rise if elected.

Social Services Minister Amanda Rishworth said the opposition’s proposal would have unintended consequences and do nothing for the 77 per cent of recipients who don’t access the income-free threshold.

Ms Rishworth also said it would do nothing to address the barriers to employment faced by people on income support.

“Our conservative estimates are that with a doubling of the income-free area, there would be an additional 50,000 people who would become eligible for JobSeeker overnight because the thresholds at which they are cut off would increase,” she said.

“This measure could actually encourage a longer-term reliance on casual work and JobSeeker rather than a transition into the workforce.”

A leading welfare advocacy group said the income free threshold was $300 in 2020/21 before the coalition government cut it and urged the Albanese government to reinstate the higher level.

“The government should be adopting every proposal that would help ensure welfare recipients and low income workers are not living in poverty,” Antipoverty Centre spokesperson Kristin O’Connell said.

“They must urgently increase the income free area to provide better support to the one in five people on unemployment payments who are employed and ensure the lowest income workers are better connected to the safety net.”

Greens acting leader Mehreen Faruqi said the government’s proposed increase was woefully inadequate, and worked out to be an extra $4 per day.

“We will definitely not stand in the way of this increase, but we know that it’s not enough,” she said.

“The government must increase JobSeeker to above the poverty line in this cost of living crisis (because) so many people are being hurt and harmed, people are really struggling to put food on the table.”

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One Response to Liberals won’t stand in the way of welfare rise: Dutton

cbrapsycho says: 31 July 2023 at 10:15 am

Coalition members clearly don’t understand the plight of unemployed people who just can’t get work, despite hundreds of applications, most not even getting a reply. Our Job Network system is a disaster.

We need to assist people to get a new job immediately they become unemployed, something the Job Network providers don’t do, because it’s more financially rewarding for them to wait until the person is classified as long-term unemployed. They get paid more for helping those people, but they only get them short-term contracts which often does not help them to get stable permanent work.

By the time the person has been out of work for some time, they are already damaged and demoralised from the lack of support, the constant rejections and ignoring of their applications, becoming depressed and finding it harder to get work. The old CES did a much better job of helping people early when they’re most likely to be able to find a new job. The public servants actually helped people without financial incentives to do so, aside from their wage for doing the job. No commissions. Just service to the public, for the public good.

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