Fri. Nov 22nd, 2024
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Hundreds of thousands of working families in Australia, many earning more than the minimum wage, don’t have enough money to live a basic, healthy lifestyle – and are at risk of slipping into poverty.

That’s according to detailed research commissioned by the Fair Work Commission ahead of the Minimum Wage Case – it’s an Annual Wage Review to determine how much both minimum and award wages need to increase to help those working Australians make ends meet.

The study by the UNSW Social Policy Research Centre was designed to answer “one of the most difficult questions in social policy and welfare economics” – how much income is ‘enough’ to allow people to live a minimal, healthy lifestyle that would allow individuals to participate in society?

Working Australians don’t earn enough to make ends meet

During the September quarter last year, Associate Professor Bruce Bradbury and other academics from UNSW’s Social Policy Research Centre looked at a huge amount of information about the kinds of things that Australians spend their money on.

Bruce Bradbury and a team of researchers at UNSW found out how much Australians need to earn each week to achieve basic living standards.()

This included: what activities they undertake, what items they buy, how often they use health, childcare and public transport services, as well as how often (or whether) they eat out, have friends over for a meal, or take a family holiday.

Researchers then priced the lowest cost items available to calculate “minimal monetary weekly amounts required to achieve this standard.”

They added in the cost of rental housing and “extremely austere” discretionary spending, allowing for alcohol at a healthy level, average tobacco and gambling expenditure, a small travel allowance and a tiny allowance for eating out.

The ABC’s The Drum updated those household budgets using CPI figures for the December and March quarter.

Associate Professor Ben Phillips from the ANU Centre for Social Research and Methods then revised the income figures to take account of the increase in the minimum wage from July, and any changes to the Family Tax Benefits and other low-income payments and concessions received.

The conclusion — many working people and working families simply won’t have enough to make ends meet each week.

A single, low-income, full-time worker living in Sydney was deemed to receive $852 in total income, after tax.

That’s about 20 per cent higher than the minimum wage.

But that individual needed $945 for food, clothing, personal and household items, health, housing, transport, and an “austere” level of discretionary spending.

What happens when we adjust for kids?

A single parent working full-time with two kids will bring in $1,202 a week, and spend $1,119, leaving them with $83 left over.

However, a dual income-earning couple — one working full-time and the other part-time — will have $1,537 coming in a week, and $1,679 going out, which means the family is underwater by $142 a week.

And they will get further in the red, as the months go by and inflation continues to drive up the cost of everything from food, to rent, to transport.

“[The dual income family’s] income is well below the income that we would say is a minimum standard for a healthy lifestyle,” Dr Bradbury from UNSW says.

The inability for a household to earn enough money to live a healthy lifestyle, the research notes, extends to middle income earners in some cases.

In extensive focus group interviews, the UNSW researchers spoke to middle-income households to provide a comparison with the budget of low-income households.

They found that with spiking cost of living in Australia, there was “a lack of substantive differences in the budgetary choices, constraints and decisions between those on middle-incomes versus low-incomes.”

How are families stretching their dollars?

All these working people and families were using the same strategies to make ends meet.

Ben Phillips reviewed the UNSW research and calculated that many working Australians do not earn an income that will allow them to make ends meet.()

These include: eating fast food rather than more expensive, healthier and homemade meals; parents skipping meals, haircuts, and buying new shoes in order to provide for their children; and not attending to their medical and dental needs.

Academic economists warn the financial pain associated with substandard living extents across many income groups and is growing in scale.

“Low-income renter households have always struggled but increasingly the burden is also being felt by low- and middle-income households with a mortgage,” Mr Phillips told The Drum.

Yet these households are nowhere near what advocates describe as the poverty line.

Where is the poverty line?

There’s no official definition of poverty in Australia, and no way of monitoring who is living in poverty or at risk of slipping into poverty.



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