2022 federal budget round-up
Ruby Kraner-Tucci
The social sector reveals what it wants most from tomorrow?s federal budget and the early promises already worth celebrating.
With the Albanese government set to hand down its first federal budget Tuesday evening, the for-purpose sector is creating noise on a range of key issues facing Australian communities.
In addition to the budget asks Pro Bono profiled last week, new calls have been issued today, including a raft of recommendations from ACOSS,˜ covering everything from unemployment to housing and climate action, while National Shelter is arguing to create a ?wellbeing budget? that shifts our focus away from economic policy.˜
A coalition of some of Australia?s most prominent faith-based charities have co-written an open letter urging the government to scrap its planned tax cuts, and Save the Children want to see key international and domestic aid interventions.
There have also been several leaks of budget inclusions, including $560 million over four years dedicated to helping community services; an additional $588 million in 2022-23 to ensure Services Australia supports Australians during emergencies including natural disasters; and early education and care reforms to increase women?s participation in the workforce.
See more: 2022 federal budget preview
See more: 2022 federal budget preview
Budget recommendations
ACOSS
To reduce poverty and inequality while managing the economy responsibly, ACOSS is recommending eight budget priorities. This includes:- Adopting a wellbeing framework with a core focus on reducing poverty.
- Committing to reach and sustain full employment, including investing in a flexible jobs and training offer for people unemployed long-term.˜
- Lifting income supports to at least $73 a day, including JobSeeker, Youth Allowance and Parenting Payment and delivering an increase in the budget to address the severe crisis facing people on these income support payments.
- Investing in quality community services for people in need by applying an immediate 5.5 per cent indexation for community sector organisation government grants to ensure they can afford to deliver the critical services for those most in need whilst paying their staff fairly.
- Investing in housing that is secure and affordable for all by constructing 25,000 new social and affordable housing dwellings per annum and lifting Commonwealth Rent Assistance by 50 per cent.
- Taking fair, fast and inclusive climate action by providing emergency debt relief to people in energy hardship and investing in energy efficiency and solar retrofits for low-income homes.
- Building thriving, climate resilient communities, through the increase of the Australian Government Disaster Recovery Payment from $1,000 to $3,000, and from $400 per child to $1,000 per child and the amount and duration of Disaster Recovery Allowance to $73 a day, indexed to wages.
- Raising the revenue to deliver what?s needed, by reversing the stage three tax cuts costing at least $18 billion a year, followed by implementing major tax reforms.
FAITH-BASED CHARITIES
In an open letter, leaders of major-faith based charities including Anglicare Australia, Baptist Care Australia, Catholic Social Services Australia, the St Vincent Paul Society National Council of Australia and UnitingCare Australia, have called for the government to scrap its planned tax cuts. The partnership argues that ?poverty in Australia is a policy choice? and the impact of the planned stage three tax cuts will ?worsen inequality, making our tax system less progressive and more unfair?. ?As organisations that speak for the nation?s most disadvantaged people, we are disappointed that the opportunity to tackle poverty has been overlooked in favour of costly and unfair tax cuts,? read the letter. ?We urge you not to proceed with the planned tax cuts in the October Budget. Instead, we hope to work with you towards a fairer and more equal Australia.?NATIONAL SHELTER
The national housing peak body is joining sector colleagues to call for the government to hand down a ?wellbeing budget?, which shifts the focus from economic outcomes to measuring progress in ways that gauge the social value of policy and its direct impact on people?s equality and prosperity. According to research by 89 Degrees East, 69 per cent of Australians are supportive of a wellbeing budget. In a statement, National Shelter said it anticipates the budget ?will include provisions for the government?s election commitments including the Housing Australia Future Fund, the Help to Buy shared equity scheme, and Housing Australia?.SAVE THE CHILDREN
Prioritising children?s wellbeing, recovery and resilience in the face of COVID-19, conflict and the climate crisis has informed Save the Children?s federal budget recommendations.˜ The organisation?s key international asks include:- Investing $70.1 million over three years to establish pilot child benefit payments, child disability benefit payments, and adult disability benefit payments in the Pacific.
- Investing $58.09 million over three years in ending violence against children in the Pacific.
- Increasing Australia?s climate finance commitment to $3 billion over 2020-2025 and commit an additional $400 million to the Green Climate Fund by 2023.˜
- Increasing Australia?s humanitarian funding allocation to at least $1.5 billion in response to increased and intensified need, and more complex emergencies.
- Committing an additional $250 million to the COVAX Advanced Market Commitment Facility, alongside an additional $100 million for the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations replenishment.
- $25.69 million over four years to support children?s wellbeing, recovery and resilience building.
- Contributing $13.7 million over four years to engage children at risk of disengaging from school.
- Allocating $24.15 million over four years to build service capacity for early detection and response to children with trauma, particularly child victims of domestic and family violence.
- $40 million investment over four years to shift disadvantage, reinvigorate community and early learning through targeted interventions with payment by outcome capabilities.
- Supporting all families to provide the material basics for all children.