Weekend Herald

New benefit rates reduce disabled pay by about 5%

- Thomas Coughlan

Benefit changes being legislated under urgency will mean people on the equivalent of a disability benefit and their carers will lose out on more than $2300 a year by 2028 — a change equivalent to about 5 per cent of the recipient’s income.

Social Developmen­t Minister Louise Upston has introduced legislatio­n to index benefit rates to Consumers Price Index (CPI) inflation rather than wages. Benefits will still go up each year, but by thousands of dollars a year less than if the change had not been made.

In 2019, the former Government switched the method of indexation from CPI inflation to wages, which is similar to how superannua­tion rates are calculated. Wages tend to rise faster than inflation, meaning benefit rates would rise higher, faster under Labour’s system. The new Government is reverting to the old system, which officials believe will save the Crown $669.52 million over the next four years.

Figures presented to the House modelled what the changes would do to benefit rates; however, they were based on out-of-date assumption­s. The Weekend Herald has taken the most up-to-date figures from the Beehive to update the figures presented to the House.

The new figures show the new system will immediatel­y begin to cost beneficiar­ies.

Under the old system, the rate for a married couple with children’s supported living payment would rise from $686.20 to $722.56 on April 1. Under the new system, the increase will be to $718.45 a week. This will mean those benefits are $4.25 a week lower this year than they would be under the old system or $221 lower for the year.

However, the increase grows throughout the forecast period. By 2028, the end of the forecast period, this gap widens. Under the existing system of indexation, the weekly wage would be $832.31; under the new system, the rate will be $786.93, leaving its recipients $45.38 worse off each week or $2359.75 worse off over the course of the year.

A supported living payment is paid to people who are disabled and cannot work, and their carers. As of December 2023, 101,502 people receive a supported living payment.

The sole parent support will rise by $2.93 less this year under the changes. Under the old system, sole parent support would rise to $573.46 a week by 2028. Under the new system, it will rise to $542.19 — $31.27 a week less.

About 76,170 people receive sole parent support, as of last December.

Labour and the Greens have slammed the changes, warning that officials estimated 7000 children could be plunged into poverty under the changes, although that figure could be as high as 13,000 or as low as 1000.

Beneficiar­y households also experience costs that rise faster than the rate of CPI inflation. Stats NZ’s Household Living Costs survey found living costs rose 6.2 per cent in beneficiar­y households in the year to December 2023, higher than the CPI inflation rate of 4.7 per cent.

Since becoming a minister, Upston has voiced displeasur­e at the number of people on benefits and the length of time they spend on a benefit.

“Despite widespread workforce shortages, the previous Government’s polices saw them leave office with 189,798 people reliant on Jobseeker Support — up 19,695 in just the past year,” Upston said. “Labour was either unable, or unwilling, to get people off welfare and into work. As a result, we’re already close to MSD’s forecast of Jobseeker Support numbers hitting 198,500 in January 2025.”

Finance Minister Nicola Willis echoed these remarks in the House on Thursday, saying a key element of the new Government’s plan to reduce child poverty would be getting people into work.

This works for some households, but not for others. Advice presented to the last Government’s Working for Families Review said children living in benefit-dependent households were not being lifted out of poverty because benefit rates remained low, despite wages growing. This is particular­ly hard for households subsisting on a supported living payment, who are far less likely to see their carers move into work, which would increase household income.

Labour’s social developmen­t spokespers­on Carmel Sepuloni told the House she was concerned Upston had not adequately considered the “actual impact that this bill will have on child poverty targets and the reduction targets moving forward”.

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