Herald on Sunday

More cash for families today

Credits changes will lift thousands of children out of poverty.

- By Lucy Bennett

Mother Nature will not stop six premature babies from being eligible for the Government’s new Best Start payment.

The payment of up to $60 a week during a baby’s first year is among a raft of measures that take effect today as part of the Families Package to boost the resources of mainly low and middle income families.

Babies born or due on or after July 1 are eligible for the tax credit. Six families whose babies were born early had applied, the Ministry of Social Developmen­t said.

Those families would sould be eligible, Social Developmen­t Minister Carmel Sepuloni said.

The July 1 date was a merely pragmatic, she said.

The tax credit, which continues through the second and third years of a child’s life for low and middle income families is expected to benefit about 65,000 newborns annually.

The Families Package, which was funded by cancelling the previous Government’s planned tax cuts, will cost $5.53 billion over five years.

The Government estimates that by 2020/21, when the package is fully rolled out, about 384,000 families with children will be better off by about $75 a week. It is projected to lift about 64,000 children out of poverty, or about 41 per cent, by 2020.

“We know that low and middle income families have been struggling with the cost of housing and the cost of living. Financial difficulti­es can put a lot of stress on the family,” Sepuloni told the Herald on Sunday. “This will really make a difference to their lives.”

The Child Poverty Action Group welcomed the increases to Working for Families rates but said that after six years of no adjustment for average wage and cost increases, the changes were little more than an overdue catch-up.

“Both the rates and threshold must be adjusted annually, and not just for price increases but also for growth in wages, so we protect the young just as we protect our superannui­tants,” said Susan St John, the group’s economics spokeswoma­n.

Unfortunat­ely, the package increased the “clawback” rate of Working for Families to 25 per cent once the $42,700 threshold was reached.

“It will be common for families earning over $48,000 to lose 30 cents in tax, 12 cents in student loan repayment, 25 cents in accommodat­ion supplement, and 25 cents in Working for Families, from every additional dollar. It feels like having a 92 per cent tax rate,” St John said.

“These tax credits are best seen as a way to compensate for both high income taxes and GST paid by lowincome families, and are a way to recognise that more children reduce the capacity of a family to pay increased tax at each income level.”

Other Families Package measures that take effect today include:

● An increase in paid parental leave from 18 to 22 weeks, and a further increase to 26 weeks on July 1, 2020

● A rise in the Family Tax Credit and Working for Families abatement threshold, making 26,000 more families eligible, rising to 39,000 by 2020/2021

● An automatic winter energy payment for beneficiar­ies, superannui­tants and veterans’ pension beneficiar­ies. Those who don’t want it can opt out

● An increase in the orphans’ benefit, unsupporte­d child benefit and foster care allowance by $20.31 a week.

● Increases in accommodat­ion supplement and benefits, which were announced by the previous National government.

 ?? Photo / Brett Phibbs ?? Natalie and Shaun Cattell and their son, Torin, 2, are looking forward to a new addition to the family.
Photo / Brett Phibbs Natalie and Shaun Cattell and their son, Torin, 2, are looking forward to a new addition to the family.

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