The robodebt scheme was intended to help the budget and crack down on welfare cheats.
It’s therefore not surprising to hear that cabinet ministers never really gave a great deal of thought to whether the scheme was illegal,and that anylegal advice warning of this possibility seems to have fallen by the waysideso easily. There are many scandals associated with robo-debt. Among the least noted is that it felt like such a natural,frictionless thing for the government to do.
To that end,let’s consider what the scheme did. It relied on “income averaging” to assert someone had been overpaid. This method simply presumes that whatever income someone earned over a year was evenly spread across it. In this way,someone who was unemployed for,say,three months might be presumed to have been employed all year,and therefore ineligible for the benefits they received. This approach might allow the government to send out as many overpayment notices in a week as they previously did in a year. But it’s also often inaccurate,a fact known to the Department of Human Services,according to what a former senior lawyertold the royal commission.
Despite this,robo-debt presumed guilt,requiring the accused to prove their innocence. And because the process was so automated,it was very difficult to plead your case to a human. This was literally automating the judgment of people as welfare cheats,often incorrectly,then depriving them of a human ear to whom those people could complain. It relegated people – often quite desperate ones – to the unaccountable calculation of machines.
If we’re honest,the unemployed aren’t treated as part of our political community. They’re more an unfortunate adjunct.
As this saga unfolds,two questions suggest themselves. How was such a manifestly unjust scheme conceivable? And why is this not a bigger scandal,even now? Alas,I suspect these two questions have the same answer:that the victims of this scheme don’t really count. In the public imagination,welfare payments are roughly synonymous with the dole. And if we’re honest,the unemployed aren’t treated as part of our political community. They’re more an unfortunate adjunct.
You don’t have to look too far for evidence of this. Recall only that – aside from a temporary pandemic lift – governments of both stripes have steadfastlyrefused to increase the unemployment benefit in real terms since the Howard era. Since that time,we’ve seen the Rudd government sweep to power on a platform of workers’ rights,pitching incessantly to “Australian working families”. We’ve seen the Coalition scream when a Labor government tried to reduce the family benefit payments. We’ve seen the Abbott government collapse quickly after its first budget because it was deemed so drastically unfair to lower-income earners. We’ve seen Labor campaign repeatedly in opposition on wage stagnation and penalty rates.