Fri. Nov 15th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

One in three Canberrans lining up for food relief have never sought charity aid before, new data suggests.

Food-aid provider OzHarvest, which collected the data, also said the number of ACT residents seeking help had almost doubled over the past six months.

Among those in need is mother-of-two Shannon Wood, whose family had been able to live comfortably on a public-service wage — until now.

“On paper, you look and go, ‘You guys have got a good income,’ but when you break it down, the reality is unfortunately it’s not enough,” Ms Wood said.

Her latest haul at Helping Hands, a weekly food pantry in Canberra’s northern suburbs, cost her $8.60, saving her about $100.

The small grocer offers milk, bread and vegetables for free, and a kilogram of chicken for as little as $2. The rest of the bill is calculated on weight.

The Helping Hands pantry provides Canberrans with free or very-low-cost groceries.()

Helping Hands markets itself as helping people “finding it difficult to make ends meet” — a category more people are falling into for the first time, Ms Wood says.

They call themselves “the in-betweeners”; people who earn too much to be eligible for government benefits, but not enough to be financially secure.

“If the car breaks down or you get an unexpected bill that’s rather large, you’re in a lot of trouble,” Ms Wood says.

“We’ve never taken the kids on holiday, we only have one 20-year-old car, and my husband catches public transport.

“What more can we do because obviously what we’re doing isn’t enough.”

Australians’ purchasing power has plummeted

Shannon Wood, outside Helping Hands, says even families with two incomes are suffering.()

Ms Wood also buys second-hand clothes, cashes in recyclable cans and minimises driving to save petrol.

She said she worried about how families earning even less coped.

“There are some families out there who have two incomes, and even still that’s not enough,” she said.

Australians’ real income levels — wages adjusted for inflation — fell more in the past 12 months than they did in the past 40 years, Australian National University economist Ben Phillips says.

“Inflation has been so high … we’ve had a big decrease in disposable income, which has gone down by about 6 per cent over 2022,” Dr Phillips said.

“So purchasing power has gone backwards … more so than any other time in recent history.”

Middle-income earners living ‘pay cheque to pay cheque’

Charity worker Robyn Wall says many working Canberrans struggle.()

Helping Hands pantry coordinator Robyn Wall said rising prices were burning a hole in the pockets of “people who’ve never had to seek help before”.

“They don’t like it, there’s some embarrassment, certainly,” she said.

Incomes in Canberra tend to be higher than elsewhere in Australia, and the ACT has the nation’s lowest jobless rate.

But Ms Wall disagrees with the notion that Canberrans are wealthy.

“It’s hidden because the numbers tell one story but those numbers don’t apply across the whole population,” she said.

Source link