Sunday Territorian

Handing out more dollars than sense Cashed-up teens highlight a major flaw in the government’s controvers­ial support program

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THE only thing more terrifying than a global pandemic is a cashed-up teen.

That was one downfall of the federal government’s jobs schemes.

Since March this year, a teenager working at a local pizza shop for a handful of hours a week earning just enough money for petrol and beer, started getting $750 a week, regardless of how many hours they worked.

For many, this would be hundreds of dollars more than they pocketed before coronaviru­s hit.

Some may not have been working at all with many businesses having to stand staff down.

From October, that income will drop to $600 a week, or $375 a week for casuals working 20 hours or less.

It will be reduced again for the first three months of 2021.

The JobKeeper payments should have been tiered from the beginning.

It’s been a hell of a year, but for casual working youngsters they’ve had a bigger disposable income than they’ve ever seen.

Money to buy tangible goodies like motorbikes and TVs that bring short-term pleasure was all of a sudden at their fingertips.

Now that income is being chopped ... and chopped again.

Casual workers should have received the payment that reflected their pre-coronaviru­s income from the beginning.

For most on JobKeeper, the government supplement was just a portion of their weekly wage.

That should have been the case for casual workers too.

There are currently 4777 NT businesses in the NT signed up to JobKeeper.

That’s thousands of businesses that have survived and been able to offer a livelihood to employees in the Territory.

Chamber of Commerce NT chief executive Greg Ireland said the government’s decision to extend the wage subsidy past September would give some much-needed certainty for these business people.

“Businesses here were very concerned facing that September cliff. This extension will help keep people in business ahead of the next peak season,” Mr Ireland said.

The JobKeeper payments should have been tiered from the beginning

“Clearly not everyone will be a winner out of that, but I’m sure that clarity will be welcomed by business.”

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said the government expected that the number of JobKeeper recipients would reduce substantia­lly.

About 1.4 million people are expected to remain eligible in the December quarter, and one million in the March 2021 quarter.

“JobKeeper 2.0, together with the extension of the coronaviru­s JobSeeker supplement, will assist Australian­s right around the country,” Mr Frydenberg said.

The JobKeeper scheme has been integral in keeping people in jobs, shop doors open and families fed.

But the haste in which it was rolled out means it wasn’t the best it could have been.

The Greens, for instance, have hitched their star to so many progressiv­e bandwagons they’ve largely made themselves irrelevant to middle Australia, which is where the votes are.

That’s a real pity because I like trees. There should be more of them.

Here in the NT, Territory Alliance threw on some runners and an anti-fracking T-shirt and practicall­y polevaulte­d onto that particular bandwagon, not that there’s anything wrong with that.

Politicall­y speaking, jumping onto bandwagons is all

Not only will some people now need to recover from the mental ramificati­ons of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, they’ll also have to readjust the budget after receiving an inflated income for the past few months. about spying an opportunit­y for success and hoping that plays well with the electorate.

It’s a risky strategy, particular­ly for a conservati­ve party, even one with a small “c”.

It may pay off or it may not. We won’t know for sure until election day — and, given that not even Nostradamu­s could predict an election outcome these days, anything could happen.

The only certainty is that if the wheels do fall off for Territory Alliance, they’ll need to choose bandwagons with better wheel alignment next time around.

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