Now here’s an interesting test for Kevin Rudd.
Momentum is gathering for an aged pension rise or one-off handout to pensioners of some kind in 2008-09, before the current review by Jeff Harmer lands in February.
Let’s be blunt here. People on the aged pension are an interest group like any other. Their claims to taxpayer dollars should be evaluated, like any others, critically, and based on evidence.
Of course, if you’re foolish enough to say that on radio, like I was, you’ll cop plenty, but it’s true nonetheless. There are other groups – homeless people, remote indigenous communities spring to mind — that arguably are a higher priority for taxpayer dollars than many pensioners. And even the smallest changes to the pension carry significant fiscal impacts. Saying that is not evidence of malice toward the aged, merely that we can’t afford to not think carefully about this.
I noted during the election campaign, back in my early, funny Crikey articles, that the electoral muscle of the grey lobby was growing rapidly and it would mean politicians would throw more and more money at them.
This is quite separate from the reality that the aged pension — particularly for single women — is barely sufficient for a dignified existence. We need to keep the policy and politics separate here.
When pension groups complained — utterly incorrectly and unreasonably — that they had missed out in the 2008 Budget, the Prime Minister and the Treasurer swiftly declared that retirement incomes had been part of the Henry review all the time, and that it would report by February. The sort of timing that meant it would feed into the 2009 budget.
It worked for a while, but it’s starting to come apart. First Wayne Swan, then Julia Gillard, then Lindsay Tanner and now Kevin Rudd, have admitted they couldn’t live on a pension. It’s become the question du jour. I can’t wait for someone to ask Brendan Nelson if he could live on a pension. He’ll probably cry when he answers. Peter Costello, it should be noted, will probably be able to live quite nicely on his pension, thanks very much. If only he’d sod off and take it.
This week, Labor backbencher Brett Raguse — a name surely crying out for a career in a three-star French restaurant — weighed in on the issue. He too couldn’t live on a pension, and he told the ABC “special attention” should be given to “people who are really feeling the pinch right now”.
Later, in the doubtless intimidating presence of the Prime Minister himself, he backtracked and said that he didn’t want an extra payment right now. South Australia’s Steve Georganas, however, was making similar noises.
Hitherto, the Opposition has been reluctant as well. Margaret May got a mugging from Malcolm Turnbull for proposing a pension increase earlier this year, and Brendan Nelson, who never normally never met a populist cause he didn’t like, referred the matter to an internal party review.
But Nelson’s desperation is finally getting the better of him, because he’s now calling for a one-off handout this year (i.e., another one, in addition to the one already budgeted) and is apparently considering proposing a significant pension increase. He also wants the pension indexed by a higher rate than CPI, a position endorsed by the Greens.
Mal Brough had something to say about this last year, when he explained that the Howard Government had linked the aged pension not merely to CPI but to Male Total Average Weekly Earnings – it can’t fall below 25% of that figure. As Brough noted, this meant considerable increases above CPI since 1997 when the link was established, amounting to nearly $3000 pa for a couple.
Presumably Nelson isn’t aware of that, or he thinks his own Government’s policy was a dud.
Possibly the former — Crikey has been told Nelson’s pension plan was cobbled together quickly, and without input from either of the relevant shadows — Tony Abbott and Malcolm Turnbull — whose offices only found out when Nelson chief of staff Peter Hendy rang them last night in anticipation of the ABC revealing it.
The only consistent long-term advocates of a pension increase have been the Greens, who have argued for a $30 a week increase, which would cost $3-4b p.a. All part of the Greens’ campaign to develop into a full-fledged political party, not just a protest vote-based environmental group.
But Rudd’s approach is the right one. We bag the Government for ceaseless reviews, inquiries and Green Papers, but when dealing with such vast sums of public money, well-evidenced policy, rather than anecdotes — and we all have anecdotes about how insufficient the pension is — is necessary.
Access to the pension, the role of lump sum payments, the interaction with superannuation, who is most in need of an increase — are all critical issues that need to be worked through. And another one-off payment this year would perpetuate the Howard Government’s handout-based policy approach, which Brendan Nelson seems unable to quite shake off despite no longer being in government.
But whether Rudd can hold out against the pressure to Do Something about pensions before next year is the question. If the Opposition tips over into arguing for an increase, Rudd, Swan and Jenny Macklin will find themselves under the hammer.
Rudd wants to concentrate on big-picture reform, but it’s the retail politics that keep tripping him up. We saw it with petrol and grocery prices and it’s happening again with pensions. There’s no option for Pensionerwatch here. There are no easy options at all — just very expensive ones.
Brendan Nelson was asked apparently and said with some emotional flourish, although disappointingly for Bernard Keane, with nary a tear : “I would have to go back to living on the bare bones of my backside as a student to survive on $273 a week”
Anecdotally pensioners are doing it tough …. well maybe and then again maybe not. The monetary part of the pensioner may be quite small, but is there as safety net. If they as many do own their own home and are the recipients of Health Cards and other perks, they are reasonably comfortable, and if not that presumably what the review of pensions is all about.
I live in the NT and am many years past the pension age and am privately funded, even so I have a Health Card, I receive discounts on my rates, electricity, car registration and insurance and many businesses give a Seniors Discount of up to 10% of my purchases, my doctor bulk bills and there is a free hospital.
Marion demonstrates my point perfectly. Pensioner ingrates should apparently only be protected from living in extreme poverty – poverty per se is ok. And you are being compared to working families. Clearly there is nothing sexy about pensioners to special interest supporters at the moment.
Pensioners – your first task is to explain that you are too old to work, and therefore can’t be compared to working families. Get with the pity program.
Marion’s comments may just indicate a hard-right wing view of the world, but there are likely many people who feel the same way about pensioners – empathy is required !
As a single/female/home owner in her 70’s I guess I am supposed to be happy that so many MP’s and Government departments are THINKING about and EMPATHISING with my struggle to keep this much loved roof over my head. I don’t think so! My long experience through various Governments has taught me that there are many long and expensive lunches between their thoughts and actions.
Meanwhile I ponder on what mathematical genius has worked out that a single pensioner requires just a little more than half that of a married couple.
My household insurances, maintenance, rates and taxes, electricity, vehicle running costs etc are the same as those shared by couples.
Many thousands of us are in the same sinking boat as we try to keep our heads above water and maintain our hard earned independence.
Pensioners are doing it tough but they are not the only ones. With child care costing about $200 a week, after maximum government subsidies, single parents on average wages are really struggling. Take about $10,000 in after-tax dollars off the average wage and see how easy it is to pay for rent, food, medical expenses and so on for an adult and a child. The only thing harder would be throwing in the job and trying to support yourself and a child on a pension. Isn’t it about time the Federal Government recognised that paying for child care is an essential expense for working parents and made it fully tax deductible, putting working parents on the same footing as workers without dependents.