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Millions of Aussies affected: How the new changes to your JobSeeker welfare payments could impact you

For a significant number of retired and unemployed Australians, welfare payments are the primary source of income.

That’s why we here at Seniors Discount Club are always keeping a keen eye on any government changes that could affect your payment plans.



Due to a recent parliament-passed increase, welfare recipients are gearing up to welcome a substantial $40-a-fortnight boost.

Considering the current cost of living crisis, this additional income is set to benefit millions of Australians.


jobseeker1.jpeg
The increase in payments has been confirmed after key legislation passed by federal parliament. Credit: Shutterstock

Australians without children on Jobseeker can expect a climb from a little over $693 to around $749 a fortnight starting from September 20 under the new amendments.

This sizable top-up consists of a pre-revealed $40-per-fortnight bump in the federal budget, coupled with an additional increment of $16 as a regular part of indexation.

In the same vein, senior JobSeekers can look forward to an incremental leap to $802.50 per fortnight.

Moreover, single parents with children aged eight and above will be eligible for the higher Parenting Payment Single rate. This amendment will insert an extra $177 into their accounts each fortnight until their youngest child reaches 14.



Services such as Youth Allowance, Parenting Payment (Partnered), Austudy, ABSTUDY Living Allowance, Disability Support Pension (Youth) and the Special Benefit will also increase by $40 per fortnight.

Social Services Minister Amanda Rishworth has stated these increases will ease the cost of living pressures for around two million Australians.

Labor assistant minister Tim Ayres has agreed, expressing that the safety net bill is marking a ‘very substantial improvement’ in welfare, one that will create a tangible difference.

However, it's also worth noting that the Greens pushed for an even further increase to the income support rate to $88 a day–or $1232 a fortnight–to lift it beyond the poverty line as the cost of living and housing crisis continues to bite hard.


jobseeker2.jpeg
The base rates of working-age and student payments will increase by $40 per fortnight. Credit: Shutterstock

Unsuccessful in their quest, Greens senator Janet Rice voiced her disappointment.

Highlighting the ongoing struggle, she stated that passing the modest increase would only condemn vulnerable people to poverty instead of offering a substantial solution conducive to welfare, health, and job search.



‘Which is absolutely bad for their wellbeing, their health and their ability to get a job—if you’ve got people living in poverty, you’re not in a position to be able to get a job,’ Senator Rice said.

‘It is absolutely shameful.’

Senator Ayres also stated he respected the arguments for higher welfare payments; however, the government was dealing with increased pressures on the budget, and higher rates would further cost ‘billions and billions of dollars’.

Independent senator David Pocock—who supported the idea of increasing payments to $88 a day, stated that the government was ‘kidding itself’ if it thought it could save money on welfare expenses and not spend it on other sectors, such as health and policing.

‘We’re going to have to pick up the bill eventually, and so it’s such short-term thinking to think that “Oh, we can just rip away social security payments, have people living in poverty, and that’s better for taxpayers”—it’s not,’ he explained.

‘We will be paying the cost when it comes to the health of those people who can’t afford fresh food, who can’t afford the basic necessities in life and who certainly can’t afford to fulfil scripts, to go and see the GP when they need it.’



The opposition and the Greens also made an effort to increase the threshold people could earn before experiencing a drop in their benefits from $150 to $300.

But that, too, didn’t pass, and Liberal frontbencher Anne Ruston commented that incentivising people to work more hours would create better job opportunities than increasing the welfare pay.

‘We philosophically believe that increasing the income-free areas and taking away the barriers... is a much more effective way of getting people back into the workforce,’ she stated.

While the debate about the effectiveness of these changes continues, there’s no denying that it is a small step towards helping vulnerable people around the country.
Key Takeaways
  • Welfare recipients in Australia are set to receive a $40-a-fortnight increase, boosting payments for those on JobSeeker and other welfare programs from September 20.
  • The Greens had proposed a higher increase to bring income support rates above the poverty line, which was rejected by the government and opposition.
  • Single parents with children aged eight and above will be eligible for the higher Parenting Payment Single rate, gaining an additional $177 each fortnight until their youngest child turns 14.
  • Despite calls for higher welfare payments, the government cited significant pressures on the budget, with other cost-of-living measures introduced to work alongside the increase.
If you have more questions about this recent change, we highly encourage getting in touch with Services Australia.

So, what are your thoughts, members? Do you think $40 a fortnight is enough to tide you over amid the high cost of living? Tell us your thoughts below!
 
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Sorry to disagree Suzanne Rose.
I know of a person who held down a job with supervision responsibility.
She had a verbal altercation with a fellow worker under her supervision, this escalated into an
interdiction by management, the result. She was asked to resign "not fired but asked to resign".
When she told me what happened I wanted to have a frank discussion with her boss, which she disagreed with. This incident has really crippled her chances of getting another job despite her OUTSTANDING QUALS AND EXP. I KNOW THIS FEMALE VERY WELL, SHE WAS PART OF MY AWAY TEAM FOR SEVERAL YEARS
AND A MEMBER OF MY TOP PERFORMING CREW!
The company I was employed with would not agree to hire her even with my recommendation,
because of the row she had.
Where is the JUSTICE? this lady is a top worker and has the smarts, but when you get some idiotic self
indulgent TWIT who cares little about fellow workers and the fallout that follows ...
My lady friend is mentally scarred, yes, she is looking for work and cannot find ANYTHING ...
I REALLY FEEL FOR HER!!!
She is a job seeker who has now been thrown on the junk heap by some itinerant dickhead who cannot
listen to and accept directions from a FEMALE SUPERVISOR..
She has had many interviews and been knocked back because of this altercation.
"Interviews with govt run job agencies.
Sorry Suzanne Rose I really needed to get this off my chest.
That happens all the time in any job situation. It happened to me too. I was suicidal until I realised that nobody cared, so I pulled up my socks and moved on. As anybody with supervisory responsibilities knows, there is very little one can do when someone decides they didn't like the way you looked at them. Your friend is not obliged to disclose what happened in her previous employment.

There are NO government run job agencies, the CES was disbanded when Howard became PM in 1996. Job agencies are now run by so-called not for profit organisations, small companies such as the one owned by Therese Rein (Kevin Rudd's wife).
 
Isn't jobseeker a stop gap payment whilst you are looking for work? A senior job seeker looking at your figure of $802.50 f/n this is $0.50c more than the rate of an aged pension partner.
The basic payments for single job seekers over 60 is $745.20 before any allowances are added. In comparison, the age pension for a single pensioner is $971.50, again before any allowances are added. How is the jobseeker allowance higher than the pension???????
 
For a significant number of retired and unemployed Australians, welfare payments are the primary source of income.

That’s why we here at Seniors Discount Club are always keeping a keen eye on any government changes that could affect your payment plans.



Due to a recent parliament-passed increase, welfare recipients are gearing up to welcome a substantial $40-a-fortnight boost.

Considering the current cost of living crisis, this additional income is set to benefit millions of Australians.


View attachment 26550
The increase in payments has been confirmed after key legislation passed by federal parliament. Credit: Shutterstock

Australians without children on Jobseeker can expect a climb from a little over $693 to around $749 a fortnight starting from September 20 under the new amendments.

This sizable top-up consists of a pre-revealed $40-per-fortnight bump in the federal budget, coupled with an additional increment of $16 as a regular part of indexation.

In the same vein, senior JobSeekers can look forward to an incremental leap to $802.50 per fortnight.

Moreover, single parents with children aged eight and above will be eligible for the higher Parenting Payment Single rate. This amendment will insert an extra $177 into their accounts each fortnight until their youngest child reaches 14.



Services such as Youth Allowance, Parenting Payment (Partnered), Austudy, ABSTUDY Living Allowance, Disability Support Pension (Youth) and the Special Benefit will also increase by $40 per fortnight.

Social Services Minister Amanda Rishworth has stated these increases will ease the cost of living pressures for around two million Australians.

Labor assistant minister Tim Ayres has agreed, expressing that the safety net bill is marking a ‘very substantial improvement’ in welfare, one that will create a tangible difference.

However, it's also worth noting that the Greens pushed for an even further increase to the income support rate to $88 a day–or $1232 a fortnight–to lift it beyond the poverty line as the cost of living and housing crisis continues to bite hard.


View attachment 26551
The base rates of working-age and student payments will increase by $40 per fortnight. Credit: Shutterstock

Unsuccessful in their quest, Greens senator Janet Rice voiced her disappointment.

Highlighting the ongoing struggle, she stated that passing the modest increase would only condemn vulnerable people to poverty instead of offering a substantial solution conducive to welfare, health, and job search.



‘Which is absolutely bad for their wellbeing, their health and their ability to get a job—if you’ve got people living in poverty, you’re not in a position to be able to get a job,’ Senator Rice said.

‘It is absolutely shameful.’

Senator Ayres also stated he respected the arguments for higher welfare payments; however, the government was dealing with increased pressures on the budget, and higher rates would further cost ‘billions and billions of dollars’.

Independent senator David Pocock—who supported the idea of increasing payments to $88 a day, stated that the government was ‘kidding itself’ if it thought it could save money on welfare expenses and not spend it on other sectors, such as health and policing.

‘We’re going to have to pick up the bill eventually, and so it’s such short-term thinking to think that “Oh, we can just rip away social security payments, have people living in poverty, and that’s better for taxpayers”—it’s not,’ he explained.

‘We will be paying the cost when it comes to the health of those people who can’t afford fresh food, who can’t afford the basic necessities in life and who certainly can’t afford to fulfil scripts, to go and see the GP when they need it.’



The opposition and the Greens also made an effort to increase the threshold people could earn before experiencing a drop in their benefits from $150 to $300.

But that, too, didn’t pass, and Liberal frontbencher Anne Ruston commented that incentivising people to work more hours would create better job opportunities than increasing the welfare pay.

It is a sad fact of life for ALL Australians, young and old..actually world wide really. Young people with mortgages rising aren't living easy either. Worldwide covid has cost a lot for all. But nothing new about fluctuations in the economy - we all should remember late 80s early 90s - 18% interest rates. It happens! We have to adapt and get through. It has never been easy on welfare/pensions.
It is a sad fact of life for ALL Australians, young and old..actually world wide really. Young people with mortgages rising aren't living easy either. Worldwide covid has cost a lot for all. But nothing new about fluctuations in the economy - we all should remember late 80s early 90s - 18% interest rates. It happens! We have to adapt and get through. It has never been easy on welfare/pensions.

‘We philosophically believe that increasing the income-free areas and taking away the barriers... is a much more effective way of getting people back into the workforce,’ she stated.

While the debate about the effectiveness of these changes continues, there’s no denying that it is a small step towards helping vulnerable people around the country.
Key Takeaways

  • Welfare recipients in Australia are set to receive a $40-a-fortnight increase, boosting payments for those on JobSeeker and other welfare programs from September 20.
  • The Greens had proposed a higher increase to bring income support rates above the poverty line, which was rejected by the government and opposition.
  • Single parents with children aged eight and above will be eligible for the higher Parenting Payment Single rate, gaining an additional $177 each fortnight until their youngest child turns 14.
  • Despite calls for higher welfare payments, the government cited significant pressures on the budget, with other cost-of-living measures introduced to work alongside the increase.
If you have more questions about this recent change, we highly encourage getting in touch with Services Australia.

So, what are your thoughts, members? Do you think $40 a fortnight is enough to tide you over amid the high cost of living? Tell us your thoughts below!

Those who really want a job couold find one.
$40 a fortnight is not nearly enough and until politicians have a go at living on the same amount of money as welfare recipients get there won’t be a substantial enough increase to help anybody get over the poverty line. With the increasing number of people suffering from mental health issues because of their constant struggle to even survive, let alone be able to afford anywhere near the standard of living all Australians should be entitled to it would probably end up costing the government less to increase welfare payments to an acceptable level than to fund all the extra costs needed to deal with the mental health issues.
IF U TAKE INTO CONSIDERATION WHAT GENUINE DOLE BLUDGERS ARE ON YOU WOULD SEE THAT THEY RECEIVE MORE THAN YOU THINK AND THEY KNOW IT
ADD RENT RELIEF
ADD THE FACT THAT A LOT OF DOLLIES SHARE HOUSING OR STILL LIVE WITH MUMMY AND THE REST OF SUBSADIES FROM THIS BABY SITTING GOVRT THEN YOU WOULD FIND THATTHE DOLLIES AND SINGLE PARENTS ARE GETTING PAID MORE THAN THE DISABLED, THIER CARERS AND THE ELDERLY US EKDERLY CARERS AND DISABLED WERE SHAFTED IN THE S
US BABY BOOMERS BUILT THIS COUNTRY AND I ALSI SERVED IN THE ARMED FORCES AND WHAT THANKS DO I GET WHEN I SEE DOLLIES AND SINBLE PARENTS GETTING TREATED LIKE WE AISTRALIANSARE RESPONSIBLE TO LOOK AFTER THEM
AFTER ALL THERE ARE JOBS OUT THERE AND SINGLE PARENTS SHOULD NOT HAVE CHILDREN IF THEY CANNOT AFFORD THEM
LETS NOT FORGET THAT SINCE THIS VIRUS STARTED DOLLIES AND SINGLE PARENTS RECEIVED $6000 MORE IN THE STIMULOUS PACKAGES AND 4 EXTRA PAY RISES THAN ELDERLY CARERS AND THE DISABLED ON TOP OFF THE 6 MONTHLY PAYMENTS
WHILR THE REST OF US ARE VICTIMS OFF A GOVT THAT HOPES WE FADE AWAY WITH VERY LITTLE CONSIDERATION
 
Last edited:
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Sadly a lot of people who comment here get their jollies by denigrating others and acting like they are so superior. Thank you for not being one of them.
SADLY IT IS A FACT THAT THAT DOLLIES AND SINGLE PARENTS ARE GETTING PAID NOW MORE THAN PENSIONERS CARERS AND THE DISABLED t
THEY SHARE ACCOMMIDATION OR LIVE AT HOME WITH MUMMY
GET SUBSIDISED RENT PLUS ALL THE OTHER BENEFITS LIKE DO NOT NEED A CAR OR INSURANCE OR PAY COUNCIL RATES 'AND DO NOT HAVE TO DO ANYTHING FOR IT AS
AS IT STANDS THEY GET PAID MORE THAN THE ELDERLY BABY BOOMERS WHO BUILT THIS COUNTRY WITHOUT WELFARE .
PAID THEIR TAXES ONLY HAD CHILDREN WHICH THEY BROUGHT UP WITHOUT WELFARE AND THIER REWARD IS WE WILL GIVE DOLLIES AND SINGLE PARENTS $6000 more IN THE STIMULOUS PACKAGES
AN EXTRA 4 OR 5 PAY INCREASES ON TOP OF THEIR 6 MONTHLY INCRIMENTS AND MALE IT THAT DOLLIES WILL GET MORE BENEFITS THAN THE WORKONG CLASS RETIREES WHO DESERVE BETTER
Sadly a lot of people who comment here get their jollies by denigrating others and acting like they are so superior. Thank you for not being one of them.
 
The basic payments for single job seekers over 60 is $745.20 before any allowances are added. In comparison, the age pension for a single pensioner is $971.50, again before any allowances are added. How is the jobseeker allowance higher than the pension???????
I only get $640 a fortnight , I'm classed as a couple even though my husband has no income or support payments.
 
For a significant number of retired and unemployed Australians, welfare payments are the primary source of income.

That’s why we here at Seniors Discount Club are always keeping a keen eye on any government changes that could affect your payment plans.



Due to a recent parliament-passed increase, welfare recipients are gearing up to welcome a substantial $40-a-fortnight boost.

Considering the current cost of living crisis, this additional income is set to benefit millions of Australians.


View attachment 26550
The increase in payments has been confirmed after key legislation passed by federal parliament. Credit: Shutterstock

Australians without children on Jobseeker can expect a climb from a little over $693 to around $749 a fortnight starting from September 20 under the new amendments.

This sizable top-up consists of a pre-revealed $40-per-fortnight bump in the federal budget, coupled with an additional increment of $16 as a regular part of indexation.

In the same vein, senior JobSeekers can look forward to an incremental leap to $802.50 per fortnight.

Moreover, single parents with children aged eight and above will be eligible for the higher Parenting Payment Single rate. This amendment will insert an extra $177 into their accounts each fortnight until their youngest child reaches 14.



Services such as Youth Allowance, Parenting Payment (Partnered), Austudy, ABSTUDY Living Allowance, Disability Support Pension (Youth) and the Special Benefit will also increase by $40 per fortnight.

Social Services Minister Amanda Rishworth has stated these increases will ease the cost of living pressures for around two million Australians.

Labor assistant minister Tim Ayres has agreed, expressing that the safety net bill is marking a ‘very substantial improvement’ in welfare, one that will create a tangible difference.

However, it's also worth noting that the Greens pushed for an even further increase to the income support rate to $88 a day–or $1232 a fortnight–to lift it beyond the poverty line as the cost of living and housing crisis continues to bite hard.


View attachment 26551
The base rates of working-age and student payments will increase by $40 per fortnight. Credit: Shutterstock

Unsuccessful in their quest, Greens senator Janet Rice voiced her disappointment.

Highlighting the ongoing struggle, she stated that passing the modest increase would only condemn vulnerable people to poverty instead of offering a substantial solution conducive to welfare, health, and job search.



‘Which is absolutely bad for their wellbeing, their health and their ability to get a job—if you’ve got people living in poverty, you’re not in a position to be able to get a job,’ Senator Rice said.

‘It is absolutely shameful.’

Senator Ayres also stated he respected the arguments for higher welfare payments; however, the government was dealing with increased pressures on the budget, and higher rates would further cost ‘billions and billions of dollars’.

Independent senator David Pocock—who supported the idea of increasing payments to $88 a day, stated that the government was ‘kidding itself’ if it thought it could save money on welfare expenses and not spend it on other sectors, such as health and policing.

‘We’re going to have to pick up the bill eventually, and so it’s such short-term thinking to think that “Oh, we can just rip away social security payments, have people living in poverty, and that’s better for taxpayers”—it’s not,’ he explained.

‘We will be paying the cost when it comes to the health of those people who can’t afford fresh food, who can’t afford the basic necessities in life and who certainly can’t afford to fulfil scripts, to go and see the GP when they need it.’



The opposition and the Greens also made an effort to increase the threshold people could earn before experiencing a drop in their benefits from $150 to $300.

But that, too, didn’t pass, and Liberal frontbencher Anne Ruston commented that incentivising people to work more hours would create better job opportunities than increasing the welfare pay.

‘We philosophically believe that increasing the income-free areas and taking away the barriers... is a much more effective way of getting people back into the workforce,’ she stated.

While the debate about the effectiveness of these changes continues, there’s no denying that it is a small step towards helping vulnerable people around the country.
Key Takeaways

  • Welfare recipients in Australia are set to receive a $40-a-fortnight increase, boosting payments for those on JobSeeker and other welfare programs from September 20.
  • The Greens had proposed a higher increase to bring income support rates above the poverty line, which was rejected by the government and opposition.
  • Single parents with children aged eight and above will be eligible for the higher Parenting Payment Single rate, gaining an additional $177 each fortnight until their youngest child turns 14.
  • Despite calls for higher welfare payments, the government cited significant pressures on the budget, with other cost-of-living measures introduced to work alongside the increase.
If you have more questions about this recent change, we highly encourage getting in touch with Services Australia.

So, what are your thoughts, members? Do you think $40 a fortnight is enough to tide you over amid the high cost of living? Tell us your thoughts below!
around $ 80--$85 p/f. would possibly scratch the surface
 
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Reactions: Suzanne rose
THEY SHARE ACCOMMIDATION OR LIVE AT HOME WITH MUMMY
GET SUBSIDISED RENT PLUS ALL THE OTHER BENEFITS LIKE DO NOT NEED A CAR OR INSURANCE OR PAY COUNCIL RATES 'AND DO NOT HAVE TO DO ANYTHING FOR IT AS
AS IT STANDS THEY GET PAID MORE THAN THE ELDERLY BABY BOOMERS WHO BUILT THIS COUNTRY WITHOUT WELFARE .
PAID THEIR TAXES ONLY HAD CHILDREN WHICH THEY BROUGHT UP WITHOUT WELFARE AND THIER REWARD IS WE WILL GIVE DOLLIES AND SINGLE PARENTS $6000 more IN THE STIMULOUS PACKAGES
AN EXTRA 4 OR 5 PAY INCREASES ON TOP OF THEIR 6 MONTHLY INCRIMENTS AND MALE IT THAT DOLLIES WILL GET MORE BENEFITS THAN THE WORKONG CLASS RETIREES WHO DESERVE BETTER
$6000 In stimulus ! What stimulus?
 
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It is definitely not going to be enough, because we still have to pay for insurances and utilities just like people who work, yes we might get some discount but it just is not enough with everything else going up. Not that I really care but I don't remember the last time we went out for a meal or had take away.
We wear clothes that we have had for at least 3 or even 4 years and only throw them out when thread bare. It is ok because at least we have clothes to wear. More than 40 dollars a fortnight would be fantastic.
i wear clothes older than that and still in very good condition.
 
i wear clothes older than that and still in very good condition.
Yep I've got clothes that are 20+ years old especially t shirts and still in really good condition, I think that can be put down to how old the clothes are, they were made back when cotton wasn't see through and they were made to last.
 
Hello everyone. I am concerned, what about the old age pesion & the disability Supprt Pension. I am on a disability support pension. Unfortunately the pension doesn't support very well. You get this pension & I am grateful, I have to be frugal. We did get an increase, a few months ago, unfortunately inflation has eaten up the the increase in pension & more. I really would like someone in politics to live off the pension for one year & see how you survive. I'm thankful I know how to be frugal. Goodluck. Goodbye everyone, Be kind to yourself.
 
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Reactions: SandyM
The basic payments for single job seekers over 60 is $745.20 before any allowances are added. In comparison, the age pension for a single pensioner is $971.50, again before any allowances are added. How is the jobseeker allowance higher than the pension???????
aged pensioner PARTNER. job seeker aged $802.50 aged pensioner partner $802.00.
 
That happens all the time in any job situation. It happened to me too. I was suicidal until I realised that nobody cared, so I pulled up my socks and moved on. As anybody with supervisory responsibilities knows, there is very little one can do when someone decides they didn't like the way you looked at them. Your friend is not obliged to disclose what happened in her previous employment.

There are NO government run job agencies, the CES was disbanded when Howard became PM in 1996. Job agencies are now run by so-called not for profit organisations, small companies such as the one owned by Therese Rein (Kevin Rudd's wife).
Sorry Trudi,
but MAXIMA Employment, these people would only look after centre link sent people.
Whether or not they were GOVT I'm not sure, but I think they were on federal payroll!
That is the employment office my friend was sent to.
She had a choice of three employment offices to go to, all sanctioned by the GOVT eg CENTERLINK.
My dear friend is no longer with us as She decided to end it all !!!
I look forward to the day when I catch up with the LOW LIFE that caused this injustice.
 
A total of $56 a fortnight amounts to $4 per day. Better than nothing but hardly a ‘milestone’ to help alleviate the poverty many on Centrelink experience. It strikes me as odd that we can commit about $346 billion for some outdated subs ( by the time they arrive), give the rich massive tax breaks and allow churches annual exemptions of over $30 billion per annum but we can’t adequately fund pensions.
As an old age pensioner there is even less benefit ( zero?) from the changes so I also wonder when do we get some respite ( other than this one off $500 energy supplement , which is appreciated but what happens the following year?? Is it a reprieve only?) for increase cost of living etc? I don’t think the old age pension is adequate for a decent standard of living. Yes, one can certainly survive on it if one owns their own home as I do but I contend that there is very little capacity to save to deal with unforeseen and even foreseen issues.
I wish I owned my home outright, but I still have a mortgage on a single pensioner's income. Imagine if I had no mortgage I would have and extra $700 a fortnight to play with and save. I would be able to have that holiday that has eluded me since Christmas 2000.
 
What’s a holiday again🙀please enlighten me😂also how do other people survive on“jokeseeker”😾
Same as people on the age pension because Jobseeker is now 50 cents more than what I get being half of a married couple. And if you can't survive a job always comes in handy.
 
For a significant number of retired and unemployed Australians, welfare payments are the primary source of income.

That’s why we here at Seniors Discount Club are always keeping a keen eye on any government changes that could affect your payment plans.



Due to a recent parliament-passed increase, welfare recipients are gearing up to welcome a substantial $40-a-fortnight boost.

Considering the current cost of living crisis, this additional income is set to benefit millions of Australians.


View attachment 26550
The increase in payments has been confirmed after key legislation passed by federal parliament. Credit: Shutterstock

Australians without children on Jobseeker can expect a climb from a little over $693 to around $749 a fortnight starting from September 20 under the new amendments.

This sizable top-up consists of a pre-revealed $40-per-fortnight bump in the federal budget, coupled with an additional increment of $16 as a regular part of indexation.

In the same vein, senior JobSeekers can look forward to an incremental leap to $802.50 per fortnight.

Moreover, single parents with children aged eight and above will be eligible for the higher Parenting Payment Single rate. This amendment will insert an extra $177 into their accounts each fortnight until their youngest child reaches 14.



Services such as Youth Allowance, Parenting Payment (Partnered), Austudy, ABSTUDY Living Allowance, Disability Support Pension (Youth) and the Special Benefit will also increase by $40 per fortnight.

Social Services Minister Amanda Rishworth has stated these increases will ease the cost of living pressures for around two million Australians.

Labor assistant minister Tim Ayres has agreed, expressing that the safety net bill is marking a ‘very substantial improvement’ in welfare, one that will create a tangible difference.

However, it's also worth noting that the Greens pushed for an even further increase to the income support rate to $88 a day–or $1232 a fortnight–to lift it beyond the poverty line as the cost of living and housing crisis continues to bite hard.


View attachment 26551
The base rates of working-age and student payments will increase by $40 per fortnight. Credit: Shutterstock

Unsuccessful in their quest, Greens senator Janet Rice voiced her disappointment.

Highlighting the ongoing struggle, she stated that passing the modest increase would only condemn vulnerable people to poverty instead of offering a substantial solution conducive to welfare, health, and job search.



‘Which is absolutely bad for their wellbeing, their health and their ability to get a job—if you’ve got people living in poverty, you’re not in a position to be able to get a job,’ Senator Rice said.

‘It is absolutely shameful.’

Senator Ayres also stated he respected the arguments for higher welfare payments; however, the government was dealing with increased pressures on the budget, and higher rates would further cost ‘billions and billions of dollars’.

Independent senator David Pocock—who supported the idea of increasing payments to $88 a day, stated that the government was ‘kidding itself’ if it thought it could save money on welfare expenses and not spend it on other sectors, such as health and policing.

‘We’re going to have to pick up the bill eventually, and so it’s such short-term thinking to think that “Oh, we can just rip away social security payments, have people living in poverty, and that’s better for taxpayers”—it’s not,’ he explained.

‘We will be paying the cost when it comes to the health of those people who can’t afford fresh food, who can’t afford the basic necessities in life and who certainly can’t afford to fulfil scripts, to go and see the GP when they need it.’



The opposition and the Greens also made an effort to increase the threshold people could earn before experiencing a drop in their benefits from $150 to $300.

But that, too, didn’t pass, and Liberal frontbencher Anne Ruston commented that incentivising people to work more hours would create better job opportunities than increasing the welfare pay.

‘We philosophically believe that increasing the income-free areas and taking away the barriers... is a much more effective way of getting people back into the workforce,’ she stated.

While the debate about the effectiveness of these changes continues, there’s no denying that it is a small step towards helping vulnerable people around the country.
Key Takeaways

  • Welfare recipients in Australia are set to receive a $40-a-fortnight increase, boosting payments for those on JobSeeker and other welfare programs from September 20.
  • The Greens had proposed a higher increase to bring income support rates above the poverty line, which was rejected by the government and opposition.
  • Single parents with children aged eight and above will be eligible for the higher Parenting Payment Single rate, gaining an additional $177 each fortnight until their youngest child turns 14.
  • Despite calls for higher welfare payments, the government cited significant pressures on the budget, with other cost-of-living measures introduced to work alongside the increase.
If you have more questions about this recent change, we highly encourage getting in touch with Services Australia.

So, what are your thoughts, members? Do you think $40 a fortnight is enough to tide you over amid the high cost of living? Tell us your thoughts below!
once again i see the govtis giving handouts for dolies and single parents and nothing extra for pensioners as usual WHAT inititive are you giving dolies a job and single parents inititive to keep there legs closed until they can afford children whileoldies just get further and further behind
 
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