260,000 Kiwi families better off from Friday
Thousands of families with children will be entitled to extra assistance when the next phase of Working for Families
kicks in on 1 April, Social Development and Employment Minister Steve Maharey said today.
From this Friday, 260,000 families – more than half of all New Zealand families – will be entitled to extra money for
living costs, housing and childcare.
The changes will see an average increase of $100 a week in support available to families with children in the $25-45,000
income band by 2007.
Steve Maharey says the 1 April changes are the biggest boost yet to Working for Families and will improve the lives of
ordinary New Zealand families with children.
"More than 88,000 New Zealanders have already benefited from Working for Families. The 1 April changes will ensure all
New Zealand families with children have a decent standard of living by targeting assistance to families that need it the
most."
Key changes from 1 April are: Family Support will increase by $25 a week for the first child and $15 a week for each
additional child The maximum Accommodation Supplement payment rates will increase for areas with higher housing costs
Foster Care Allowance, Unsupported Childs Benefit and Orphans Benefit will all increase by $15 per child.
"Working for Families provides targeted increases to the weekly incomes of families with children that could never be
achieved through tax cuts.
"For example a two-parent single-income family with four children earning $55,000 will gain an extra $150 per week from
Working for Families by 2007. Tax rates would need to reduce to 9-and-a-half cents in the dollar to boost their income
by the same level.
"A two-parent family with two children earning $37,440 will gain an extra $160 per week from Working for Families by the
time it's fully implemented in 2007, but don't pay enough tax for tax cuts to deliver the equivalent benefit.
"Working for Families builds on the work this government has done since 1999 to improve the lives of New Zealand
families, including paid parental leave, lifting the minimum wage and income related rents."