Our response to the crisis ought to be one of social solidarity: a repudiation of the selfish core of the neo-liberal ideology.
The pressing need for reform arises with the backdrop of increases in the cost-of-living, and the moral imperative of providing dignity and quality of life for all.
Reform of pensions - the need for a clear formula
The Greens - in negotiations with Labor - until recently looked to have secured an increase of only $30 a week for single aged pensioners.
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These proposals did not come anywhere near the modest standard proposed by the CPSA. Furthermore, they seem to be considered in isolation from other vulnerable pension groups.
The Federal Government’s “Pension Review”, meanwhile, looks set to suggest an increase of $35 a week for single aged pensioners. Recently Treasurer Wayne Swan seemed likely to accept this option, reportedly confirming to The Age that there will be an increase for pensioners.
When pressed, though, Mr Swan's office said that the government had not formally committed to its response to the pension review, and that no firm figure had been “set in stone” yet for any pension groups.
But even supposing there is an increase of $35 a week for pensions “across the board”, there remains the need for a formula that builds upon and extends the previous standard of 25 per cent of Male Total Average Weekly Earnings (MATWE). Without a new formula, immediate changes in pension rates cannot deliver security and certainty for pensioners of all kinds over the long term.
Australian Greens Senator, Rachel Siewert, has made a point of condemning current rates for the unemployed. For singles, the unemployment allowance, Newstart, is only $224.65 a week; for singles with children, it is $243 a week.
Considered on a fortnightly basis, the single unemployed person’s pension is $449.30: more than $100 a fortnight less than the appallingly inadequate single pension for the aged, carers and the disabled.
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Some welfare groups, meanwhile, have been reticent in arguing for more ambitious agendas. This February, the Australian Council of Social Services (ACOSS) called on the government to increase the Newstart Allowance (the dole) by $30 a week - to $255.
Among these competing claims for reform, the key to fairness ought to be discerned through ongoing enquiry into the material needs of all pensioners: such as to provide - among other things - for the following:
- social connectedness, recreation and activity;
- personal development - e.g. through community education and other avenues;
- access to high quality health care of choice;
- the means to enjoy a nutritious and varied diet;
- subsidised pharmaceuticals and free health care;
- fair and comprehensive allowances for utilities bills;
- transport expenses;
- adequate housing - and where applicable - home maintenance and gardening expenses;
- engagement through the communications and information technology of the day;
- allowance for contingencies - eg: repairing the fridge, the computer or the TV; and
- purchase of consumer goods which are in keeping with the accepted standards of the age.
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