Skip to main content

Grattan Institute think tank calling for $100 a week increase in JobSeeker unemployment dole payment

NewsColony
Grattan Institute think tank calling for $100 a week increase in JobSeeker unemployment dole payment

Unemployed Australians could be receiving a permanent $100 a week boost to their dole payments to encourage people to spend more, if a think tank has its way.

Since April 27, the JobSeeker benefit has been temporarily doubled from the old Newstart rate of $565.70 a fortnight to $1,115.70, with a $550 coronavirus supplement.

With that short-term boost ending in September, the Grattan Institute think tank is calling for a permanent $100 a week increase.

This would take JobSeeker payments to $765.70 a fortnight.

It estimated this policy would cost $2billion in 2021-21 and $8billion in 2021-22, marking the first permanent increase in the dole beyond inflation since 1994.

Unemployed Australians could be receiving a permanent $100 a week boost to their dole payments to encourage people to spend more. Pictured is a Centrelink queue on March 23, 2020

Unemployed Australians could be receiving a permanent $100 a week boost to their dole payments to encourage people to spend more. Pictured is a Centrelink queue on March 23, 2020

Unemployed Australians could be receiving a permanent $100 a week boost to their dole payments to encourage people to spend more. Pictured is a Centrelink queue on March 23, 2020

Social Services Minister Anne Ruston, who is in charge of Centrelink, on Sunday ruled out a less generous $75 a week increase.

Grattan Institute plan for the unemployed

The Grattan Institute is calling for the JobSeeker rate to be permanently raised by $100 a week

This would see the dole rise to $765.70 a fortnight, up from the old Newstart rate of $565.70 a fortnight

The think tank calculated this would cost $2billion in 2020-21 and $8billion in 2021-22 

Advertisement

Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Monday cautioned against making the dole too generous, even though Australia’s unemployment rate in May rose to a 19-year high of 7.1 per cent.

‘We can’t allow the JobSeeker payment to become an impediment to people … doing work, you know, getting extra shifts,’ he told Sydney radio 2GB broadcaster Ray Hadley.

‘We are getting a lot of anecdotal feedback from small businesses and large businesses where some of them are finding it hard to get people to come and take the shifts, because they’re on these these higher levels of payments.’ 

Nonetheless, the Grattan Institute said raising unemployment benefits was an essential part of driving an economic recovery, arguing it would boost spending and create jobs.

‘Failing to provide this support will condemn many Australians to unemployment for longer,’ it said.

‘During the Great Depression, and in many advanced economies in the past decade, premature moves to austerity held back recoveries and, in some cases, created new recessions.’

The Reserve Bank is forecasting a ten per cent plunge in Australia’s economic output in the first half of 2020, or a level equivalent to four-and-a-half years of gross domestic product. 

Source: Daily Mail australia

The post Grattan Institute think tank calling for $100 a week increase in JobSeeker unemployment dole payment appeared first on NewsColony.
NewsColony



source https://newscolony.com/grattan-institute-think-tank-calling-for-100-a-week-increase-in-jobseeker-unemployment-dole-payment/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Volunteers book hotel room for homeless man with SingapoRediscovers vouchers

NewsColony Volunteers book hotel room for homeless man with SingapoRediscovers vouchers © The Independent Singapore Singapore — A group of volunteers from the Mummy Yummy Singapore welfare organisation donated their SingapoRediscovers Vouchers to book a hotel room for a homeless man. The man, who was identified as Jayden, did not have a place to live while waiting for the Housing Board (HDB) to allocate him a rental flat. In a Facebook post on Mummy Yummy Singapore’s page on Wednesday (Dec 16), the volunteers said: “We used our $100 Rediscover Singapore vouchers to redeem hotel stay for him and successfully booked 9 days worth of stay at 3 days per voucher.” They added that they were unable to book a longer stay because of higher hotel rates over Christmas and New Year. The volunteers hoped that they would be able to bridge Jayden’s stay until he got a flat. “Thanks our government for giving us these vouchers which in return we can put them to good use for people in need,” th...

Disabled people are still vulnerable, even as COVID-19 normalizes their ‘special’ needs

Disabled people are still vulnerable, even as COVID-19 normalizes their ‘special’ needs NewsColony Perhaps it’s appropriate that public notices of the COVID-19 crisis began as an ableist cruelty. Health officials assured the nation that only the elderly and those with chronic health conditions would be seriously affected; most Americans (i.e., the normal people) would have only mild symptoms and be fine. x A friendly reminder: people who will be high-risk patients if we get coronavirus can hear you when you reassure everyone we’re the only ones who might die. â€Â” Alexandra Brodsky (@azbrodsky) February 29, 2020 Soon after the announcement of those assurances, the likelihood of high-risk people surviving was further limited by the people more likely to be fine. Shopping frenzies cleared stores of essential supplies needed everyday by many disabled people, like thermometers, hand wipes, masks, and IV infusion supplies. Accustomed to their needs ...

Coronavirus UK: BBC makes changes to ‘lift people’s spirits’

Coronavirus UK: BBC makes changes to ‘lift people’s spirits’ NewsColony BBC viewers have been warned that ‘things will look and sound a bit different’ during the coronavirus crisis.  In a blog post on the corporation’s website, BBC News Chief Fran Unsworth outlined a number of changes its newsroom was making in light of the ‘rapidly evolving situation’.   Among the changes, presenters will doing their own make-up, many interviews will be conducted remotely and the BBC will rely more on its network of local reporters, Ms Unsworth explained. TV veterans Mr Motivator and Angela Rippon have also signed up for a new BBC One show to lift people’s spirits during the pandemic. HealthCheck UK Live, with Watchdog’s Michelle Ackerley and CBBC star Dr Xand van Tulleken will air every weekday for two weeks. TV veterans Mr Motivator and Angela Rippon have also signed up for a new BBC One show to lift people’s spirits during the pandemic HealthCheck UK Live, with Wa...