Child Poverty Action Group heads back to Court
Child Poverty Action Group heads back to
Court
CPAG's challenge to the In Work
Tax Credit under the Human Rights Act heads to the Court of
Appeal on Tuesday 28th May.
Assoc. Professor
Susan St John CPAG's economics spokesperson says "CPAG's
case was first heard in the Human Rights Review Tribunal in
2008. We are seeking a declaration from the Court of Appeal
that the In Work Tax Credit discriminates against the
poorest children on grounds of their parents' employment
status"
For the caregiver to be paid the In Work
Tax Credit to help with the costs of children and alleviate
child poverty, a sole parent must be in paid work at least
20 hours a week and a two parent family at least 30 hours to
qualify. Moreover the family must not be receiving any
benefit or part benefit.
The point of the case is
to reassert the fundamental New Zealand ethos of equality of
treatment. The needs of children don't change when a
parent's circumstances change. "Until we give all low income
children the same rights to state assistance we will make
little progress in tackling the worst of child poverty in
New Zealand" says St John, noting that "Māori and Pasifika
children are affected disproportionately".
"The
In Work Tax Credit is worth at least $60 a week to a poor
family and would go a long way to help feed the family and
pay for the basics that children need to be healthy. If it
is supposed to be a work incentive, it is very poorly
designed and there are lots of other more effective ways to
make work pay that don't penalise 230,000 of New Zealand's
poorest children"
The case will be heard in
Wellington next week in the Court of Appeal on Tues May 28th
and Wed May
29th.
ENDS