Herald-Sun welfare-bashing articles, October 2017
- Warning over booming Australian welfare bill
- Record number of Australians tip off Government on welfare cheats
A disgraceful campaign by Rupert Murdoch’s publications to demonize welfare recipients.
Warning over booming Australian welfare bill
Tom Minear, National Political Reporter, Herald Sun, October 22, 2017 11:00pm
TAXPAYERS are coughing up $300,000 a minute for a welfare bill that has soared $40 billion in 10 years.
The Herald Sun can reveal that the total lifetime welfare bill for all those currently receiving benefits has been estimated at $2.1 trillion.
The frightening figure emerged as federal government debt reached a record $506 billion yesterday, renewing concerns about the public cost of supporting those who game the system or are locked into a cycle of welfare dependency.
Remarkably, anyone currently receiving government help to study is expected to be on welfare for nearly half of the rest of their lives, costing taxpayers an average of $247,000.
Startling figures in two new reports from the Department of Social Services and the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare highlight the challenge of reining in welfare costs.
Last year, more than 733,000 people received unemployment benefits, costing $10 billion, up from $5.6 billion a decade ago.
The number of students receiving the Youth Allowance dropped by almost 10 per cent in two years, saving $400 million.
The Herald Sun revealed earlier this year that more than 100,000 jobseekers who were on the dole for at least five years had cost taxpayers $15 billion over the past decade.
The government has already found $30 billion in welfare savings by toughening compliance measures for dole recipients, as well as by adjusting pension and family tax payments.
Social Services Minister Christian Porter said welfare spending made up almost a third of the federal budget. Picture: Kym Smith
Social Services Minister Christian Porter said: “My job as Minister is to ensure taxpayer funds are spent on helping those who actually need it, and that we aren’t borrowing money to fund the welfare system of our time, as this just forces our children to pay it off through higher taxes in the future.”
The $2.1 trillion bill, detailed in the Department of Social Services annual report, was calculated by PricewaterhouseCoopers based on modelling of how people typically moved through the welfare system.
Mr Porter said welfare spending made up almost a third of the federal budget, and the government was now handing out benefits worth $430 million a day.
The nation’s total annual welfare bill of $157 billion now accounts for 9.5 per cent of Gross Domestic Product, according to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, up from 8.6 per cent a decade ago.
The DSS report revealed two-thirds of people on the dole managed to get off it within a year, while 80 per cent of students were no longer receiving any benefits 12 months after they stopped receiving the Youth Allowance.
Mr Porter said the growth of those two payments under Labor was 13.5 per cent, which was “entirely unsustainable” and had been reduced, meaning “more people in jobs and less on welfare”.
Opposition employment spokesman Brendan O’Connor said last week Labor was “up for the conversation” about the support for job seekers.
“We want to be making sure that people move from welfare to work in a genuine way,” he said.
Opposition social services spokeswoman Jenny Macklin said the reports highlighted a “serious problem with underemployment”.
She said 10 per cent of workers wanted more hours but couldn’t get them, while a quarter of the unemployed had been out of a job for more than a year.
Last year, 65.8 per cent of those aged over 65 received a pension, down from 69 per cent due to changes to the assets test, but the total pensions bill still climbed to $44 billion.
The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare noted that while Australia’s spending had risen sharply, our welfare-to-GDP ratio was still lower than the OECD average. European countries, which limit means testing, typically spend more.
tom.minear@news.com.au
Record number of Australians tip off Government on welfare cheats
Matthew Killoran, The Courier-Mail, October 31, 2017 1:00am
AUSTRALIANS are grassing up their neighbours over welfare fraud and dole bludging at a greater rate than ever before.
Queenslanders were already among the most ready to dob in a welfare cheat, but have also had one of the highest increases in the number of tip offs made.
The number of welfare tip offs nationally has increased each year for the past four years, rising from 99,106 in 2013-14 to 108,798 in 2016-17.
Queensland was responsible for almost a quarter of the tip offs in the past financial year, Department of Human Services data reveals.
It received 25,0487 warnings in 2016-17 through its welfare fraud hotline, “reporting fraud” online portal, MP offices or otherwise – up almost 14 per cent compared to three years ago.
NSW had the highest number of people referring their neighbours for welfare fraud, 31,041, but saw almost no increase in the rate over the past three years.
More than 21,400 people dobbed in welfare frauds in Victoria in 2016-17, but this was less than a 5 per cent increase from 2014-15.
Human Services Minister Alan Tudge said the Turnbull Government was getting tough on welfare cheats. Picture: AAP/Mick Tsikas
All tips received by the department are investigated in a bid to detect fraud and prosecute cheats where necessary.
Human Services Minister Alan Tudge said most welfare recipients did the right thing, but some people were deliberately defrauding the system.
“We are putting more effort into cracking down on welfare fraud than ever before because nothing annoys the taxpayer more than others ripping them off,” he said.
“Taxpayers are happy to support those who are down on their luck but they expect integrity in the system.
“Tip offs have become a very important source of information which helps us discover fraud and ensure people who commit it are caught and prosecuted where appropriate.”
The 108,000 tip offs nationwide last year resulted in 118 referrals to the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions and recovered $40 million in debt.
As part of a broader welfare crackdown, the Turnbull Government is planning to rollout a trial to drug testing welfare recipients in three locations, including Logan in Queensland.
It is planned to start from January 1, but has yet to get the support in the Senate to pass the legislation required to do this.
Linked from 2/11/2017 Journal