Mixed budget reaction from community services sector˜
Isabelle Oderberg
Sector welcomes community service funding but roundly condemns the federal government?s lack of movement on social welfare payments while granting tax cuts to high income earners.˜
The community sector is giving a mixed reception to the federal budget, with nods for community services funding and support for volunteering, but roundly condemning the lack of movement on JobSeeker rates even as the government issues its much-criticised stage 3 tax cuts.
?As cost of living and housing pressures go through the roof, people who rely on income support are unable to pay for many of the essentials of life,? Mission Australia?s CEO Sharon Callister said.
?Mission Australia acknowledges the $33 billion allocated to income support in the budget over the forward estimates, which reflects rises in payments linked to the cost of inflation and the projection that unemployment will worsen in the coming years. However, this does nothing to adequately increase support to a level that keeps people out of poverty and homelessness.?
Australian Council of Social Service CEO Dr Cassandra Goldie shared Mission?s concerns.˜
?We remain deeply concerned for people who have the least and are in chronic financial distress ? people who are unemployed, single parents, people with disabilities, students and people on temporary visas. There isn?t enough in this budget to help them right now,? she said.
?People on the lowest incomes are facing multiple and unrelenting crises right now ? extreme weather events, rising rents, food and fuel costs, and the prospect of more losing their jobs means that government must deliver on lifting incomes and social and affordable housing.
?Instead of spending money on stage 3 tax cuts, we could lift incomes, including jobseeker and disaster recovery payments, fund social housing, and adequately fund community services so they can help people when they need it most.?
Anti-Poverty Network SA spokesperson Duncan Bainbridge said the most recent $1.83-a-day rise to JobSeeker, an automatic, twice-a-year indexation to ensure JobSeeker matches inflation, does not even come close to matching what is happening to people?s lives.˜
?JobSeeker is only $48 a day. People on JobSeeker are facing unprecedented, unsustainable rises in rents, and other basic costs. We hear of $30-$50-a-week rent rises, compounded by double-digit percentage increases in utility and fresh food costs. These increases are blowing a low-income person?s budget to pieces,? he said.˜
?Labor should recognise this, and implement an immediate raise to JobSeeker and other payments, lifting them above the poverty-line, something long supported by most of the community.?
Anglicare Australia executive director Kasy Chambers said the most disappointing part of the budget was the stage 3 tax cuts.˜
?Even those set to benefit say they don?t need them,? she said.˜
?These tax cuts will damage our progressive tax system and lock-in unfairness. Our costings show that if the government scrapped the tax cuts, it could lift 2.4 million people out of poverty and boost affordable housing ? with savings to spare.
?If the government is serious about wellbeing, it should be lifting people out of poverty ? not handing money back to people who don?t want or need it.?