Title: What is government doing to assist low income families?
1What is government doing to assist low income
families?
- QUALITY PUBLIC EDUCATION COALITION (QPEC)
- March 19th 2005
- Dr Susan St John
- Department of Economics
- University Auckland
- s.stjohn_at_auckland.ac.nz
2Why the poorest families struggle in the
education sector
- The benefits cuts of 1991
- Tax cuts of 1996
- Introduction of the Child Tax Credit,
- Lack of indexation of Family Support
- The explosion in housing costs
- Student loans and other debt
- Casualisation of low wage employment
- Social hazards such as drugs and gambling
- Time-fractured nature of family living.
- Invisibility of children in policy making
-
3Economic growth is not the answer
MSD 2003
(MSD, 2004)
4Doubling since 1996
Doubling since 1996, huge increase2003-2004
5Children below the unofficial poverty line (MSD,
The Social Report 2004)
Based on 60 of equivalised median income after
housing costs, MSD
6UNICEF report 2005
50 poverty line
7Whose done something about it?
8Is it all the fault of 9 long years under
National
- UNICEF 16.3 2000
- MSD 14.7 2005
- What has the government done?
- income related rents
- Minimum wages
- Working for families
9- Working for families is the biggest offensive
in the war against child poverty in decades - Helen Clark
- Using a poverty value measure of 60 per cent of
median household income there is expected to be a
30 per cent reduction in child poverty by
2007/08. -
Budget 2004
10The poorest of poor children are those in benefit
families- MSD
- 250,000 children on benefits
- MSD The social report 2004
- 300,000 children in poverty
- 176,000 with parents on benefits
- 122,000 with parents in work
11Working for Families- highlights
- 2005 Increases in Family Support 25/15
- 2006 In Work Payment, threshold for Family
Support increases - 2007 Extra 10 Family Support
12Working for families - low lights
Opportunistic behaviour Other agendas
13Neglect of family assistance
- From Post war security
- 1986 Family Support/ Family benefit
- 1991 Family Support
- 1996 Family Support and the Child Tax Credit
- 2005 Working for Families??
14(No Transcript)
15Figure 2 Maximum per week real family
assistance(1-child family) 1986-2008 (2004)
Substantial real gains for in work families
from 2006
Loss of Special Benefit may leave some families
on benefits no worse off
16Problem with the In work Payment
- Replaces the Child Tax Credit
- Families get at least 15 more week
- Only applies where there are children
- Complex
- Hours worked required
- Discriminatory
- Sole parents
- Maori and PI
- Families in work get complex benefit top-ups
from the state - Hurts children when jobs are lost
- Or hours worked are not met
17Why does WFF do very little for the poorest
children?
- Primacy of work incentives over immediacy of
ending child poverty - Beliefs around whose work incentives are the most
important - Middle income parents
- Parents on benefits
- Multiple goals
- Core benefit restructuring
- Cuts to hardship provisions
18Why should child poverty be the focus?
- Child poverty damages now
- Public health approach
- Investment approach
- Rights approach
- Implications
- Reducing child poverty requires increasing income
by real redistribution now - then focus on dysfunction
- work follows does not lead
- accept some parents cant work
- Creating work incentives cant justify keeping
families on benefits in poverty
19The irony of this budget
20High effective tax rates long income ranges
- A 4-child family on over 38,000
- Earns another 1000
- tax 330.0
- Loss of Family support 300.0
- ACC 12.2
- Student loan 100.0
- Retains only 257.8
21Conclusion
- WFF delivers a significant real redistribution to
working families by 2006/8 - Restructuring benefits in 2005 has muddied the
waters - Those who fail to qualify for the IWP in 2006 are
left further behind - WFF is too little and too late to make
significant impact on the poorest children.