UPDATE ON IMPACT OF THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME ON SOCIAL SECURITY PENALTIES

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Transcription:

UPDATE ON IMPACT OF THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME ON SOCIAL SECURITY PENALTIES PREPARED FOR JOBS AUSTRALIA BY: LISA FOWKES RESEARCH SCHOLAR CENTRE FOR ABORIGINAL ECONOMIC POLICY RESEARCH, ANU 8 SEPTEMBER 216

Page 2 CONTENTS 1. Introduction... 3 2. Total financial penalties... 3 Chart 1: Total financial penalties... 3 3. Penalties applied for failing to attend Work for the Dole... 3 Chart 2: No Show No Pay penalties for non attendance in activities RJCP and CDP... 4 4. Serious penalties... 4 Chart 3: Serious penalties for persistent non-compliance RJCP and CDP... 5 5. Proportion of penalties being incurred by CDP job seekers... 5 Chart 4: Penalties applied to CDP job seekers as a percentage of all penalties... 5 Chart 5: All financial penalties Indegenous and non-indigenous... 6

Page 3 1. Introduction From 1 July 215 unemployed job seekers in the Community Development Programme with a full time work capacity were required to Work for the Dole for 25 hours per week, 5 days per week. A previous report showed that, in the first six months of these arrangements, financial penalties applied to CDP job seekers more than doubled, compared to the previous six months. It showed that, in the last quarter of 215, CDP job seekers accounted for over half (57%) of all social security penalties being applied to unemployed people, despite representing less than 5% of this group. However, it was expected that this overrepresentation might decline as the new mainstream employment program (jobactive) matured. This report updates the analysis using the recent release of public data about job seeker penalties covering the quarter to March 216 that is, the first nine months of CDP. 2. Total financial penalties Chart 1 shows that penalties in what is now CDP have continued to rise, and are rising faster than penalties applied to clients in the mainstream program. There are approximately 34, job seekers in CDP, compared to around 76, in jobactive it is less than 1/2 th the size of the larger program. Yet, since the CDP came in, the number of penalties to remote job seekers has exceeded that applied to their non-remote counterparts. In the quarter ending March 216, 46,183 financial penalties were applied to CDP participants, compared with 27,338 applied to jobactive job seekers. Chart 1: Total financial penalties 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 JSA/jobactive RJCP/CDP 3. Penalties applied for failing to attend Work for the Dole The CDP funding model links the bulk of provider fees to Work for the Dole attendance. This means that, in order for the provider to get paid service fees for a particular job seeker, that person must either attend Work for the Dole, provide a valid excuse or the provider must recommend that a penalty be imposed and then re-engage them in Work for the Dole within 2 weeks. In addition, under the performance rating system applied by PM&C to the program, providers that do not recommend penalties where job seekers fail to attend are penalised.

Number of penalties Page 4 The first six months of the program (from 1 July 215 to 31 st December 215) marked a transition period for both the funding model and the performance rating system. The March 216 data release is the first post transition release. Chart 2 shows the number of penalties applied for nonattendance in Work for the Dole activities. While the rise in the March 216 quarter was not as steep as the one that preceded it, it still represented an increase of nearly 1, penalties from 3,15 in the quarter ending December 215 to 4,4 in the quarter ending March 216 1. The number of these penalties applied in the March 216 quarter was more than six times the number applied in the March quarter in the previous year. Each of these No Show No Pay penalties means the loss of 1/1 th of fortnightly income support. Chart 2: No Show No Pay penalties for non attendance in activities RJCP and CDP 45 4 35 3 25 2 15 1 5 4. Serious penalties Serious penalties can be either work related (e.g. refusing suitable work) or as a result of persistent non-compliance with mutual obligation requirements. Under CDP over 95% of serious penalties are for persistent non-compliance rather than work refusal. Persistent non-compliance penalties are applied when there have been 3 minor penalties in the previous six months, or since the last serious failure, and DHS finds that the non-compliance is deliberate. Serious penalties can mean up to 8 weeks without income support. Job seekers can choose to work off their 8-week penalty by doing a compliance activity generally 25 hours per week Work for the Dole. For most participants in jobactive this level of participation is significantly more than they would normally be required to undertake. However most CDP participants are already required to Work for the Dole for 25 hours per week, so a compliance activity does not mean an additional burden. Upon returning to Work for the Dole as part of a compliance activity, CDP participants payments are reinstated, but not generally back-paid. There is no available public data which shows how many weeks either on average or in aggregate are actually lost through 8 week penalties. However, the number of penalties applied for persistent noncompliance is an indicator of the number of people who have been repeatedly penalised -at least three times - over a maximum 6-month period. In the March 216 quarter, 5672 serious penalties were applied, an increase of one third on the 4148 applied in the previous quarter. Each represents 1 The number of days that job seekers were required to attend in the March 216 quarter was somewhat reduced by periods of leave, including cultural leave which is often taken around this time of year.

Number of penalties Page 5 at least three minor penalties followed by up to 8 weeks without payment. Anecdotal evidence from providers suggests that while most job seekers do take up the compliance activity option, a significant number spend days or weeks off benefits before they re-engage. Chart 3: Serious penalties for persistent non-compliance RJCP and CDP 6 5 4 3 2 1 5. Proportion of penalties being incurred by CDP job seekers CDP job seekers represent fewer than 5% of the total group of job seekers who are subject to income support penalties. In the first six months of CDP they received 54% of all financial penalties. In the last briefing note I argued for caution in considering these comparisons because this period represented the first six months of the new jobactive program. I expected that jobactive penalties would increase and the level of over-representation of CDP would as a consequence - decline. However, as Chart 4 shows, there is no sign of this happening. In the March 216 quarter, 61% of all financial penalties were imposed on CDP job seekers, and 84% of penalties for persistent noncompliance were applied to this group despite their accounting for less than 5% of the total job seeker group. Chart 4: Penalties applied to CDP job seekers as a percentage of all penalties 9% 8% 7% 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% % All financial penalties NSNP (activities) Serious failures (persistent non compliance)

Page 6 Because the vast majority of job seekers in CDP are Indigenous identified (around 84%), this is showing up in the trends in relation to numbers of penalties applied to Indigenous and non- Indigenous job seekers. Chart 5 shows that, from the quarter ending September 215 that is, from the time the CDP started the number of penalties applied to Indigenous identified job seekers has exceeded that applied to those not identified as Indigenous in every quarter. This gap has been widening, so that, in the March 216 quarter, 66% of all penalties were applied to Indigenous job seekers, while they represented approximately 11% of all job seekers nationally. Chart 5: All financial penalties Indegenous and non-indigenous 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Indigenous Non Indigenous Indigenous identified job seekers accounted for 86% of persistent non-compliance penalties imposed, but only 11% of serious penalties related to refusal of suitable work. DHS was significantly more likely to find that Indigenous job seekers had intentionally failed to comply than non- Indigenous job seekers with 45% of CCAs involving Indigenous job seekers resulting in a persistent non-compliance finding, compared with 27% of those involving non Indigenous job seekers in the March 216 quarter.