Under the current age pension income test,a single person loses 50¢ in every dollar they earn over $180 a fortnight. A couple loses 50¢ in every dollar they earn over a combined $320 a fortnight. The current age pension is $882 a fortnight.
National Seniors argues axing the income test for pensioners with limited assets would bring many more potential workers into the labour market. It is proposing the change could be introduced broadly or targeted at people working in areas of critical labour shortage such as health and aged care,mining or agriculture.
National Seniors chief advocate Ian Henschke says axing the income test on the age pension would pay for itself with higher workforce participation.
National Seniors’ chief advocate,Ian Henschke,said the 50¢-in-the-dollar reduction in the pension meant for many older Australians it was not worth working an extra day or two a week.
He said a change to the treatment of employment income under the pension income test would be of particular assistance in areas such as aged home and residential care,which require large increases in workers.
“This would boost their income and savings in retirement. If we change this and encourage – not discourage – the participation of older workers,it will boost the nation’s productivity,” he said.
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“Josh Frydenberg needs to act now. You’ve got a budget coming up,so it’s time to show some common sense and fix it. With an election looming,[Labor leader] Anthony Albanese and[shadow treasurer] Jim Chalmers should consider it too.
“This policy change will not be a cost to the budget. Quite the opposite. It will boost GDP,increase tax revenue and create a grey army of new workers to build a better future for Australia particularly in aged care.”
Mr Henschke said there were fewer than 76,000 pensioners with any employment income,arguing this meant the cost of the change would be limited.
While National Seniors are pushing for tax concessions to boost workforce participation,Everybody’s Home – a national campaign to end homelessness – wants an overhaul of social housing in the budget.
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In its pre-budget submission,it argued under-investment in social housing was costing the federal government $676.5 million a year due the social costs of increased homeless and service provision. By 2036,if there was no increase in social housing,the cost would reach $1.3 billion.
It is calling for the construction of 25,000 social housing properties a year,the development of a national housing strategy led possibly by a federal statutory agency and increasing Commonwealth rent assistance by at least 50 per cent.
The organisation’s spokesperson,Kate Colvin,said the surge in rental and property prices over the COVID-19 pandemic was breaking family budgets and pushing families into homelessness.
An investment in social housing was urgent and worthwhile,she said.
“Australia’s common prosperity is best served by a housing system that gives people on low and modest incomes genuine choice and provides them with security and stability,” she said.
“The increasingly brutal financial contest for housing is simply indecent. We can do better.”
The federal budget will be handed down by Mr Frydenberg on March 29.
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