Job losses compounded by loss of family assistance
PRESS RELEASE:
Job losses compounded by loss of family assistance, say child advocates
With job losses
appearing in an already worrying economic climate,
New
Zealand is about to discover the flaws in the Working
for Families package,
says Child Poverty Action Group
(CPAG).
“Families formerly on around $35,000 who join
the queues at WINZ will find
that in-work payments for
their children suddenly stop along with their paid
work.
Caregivers will get at least $60 a week less to met the
needs of their
children,” says CPAG economics
spokesperson Dr Susan St John.
“In the good old days,
the family benefit was there for all children and did
not
disappear just because a parent lost their job. Family
payments actually
went up, to cushion the blow,” St
John observes.
Nowadays, it seems the only things to go up
when families hit hard times are
the prices of basic
food, fuel and utilities. For people in that
situation,
$60 per week is often the difference between
struggling to get by and being
left in poverty.
“Do
families in Mosgiel really need to be denied this child
payment so that
they have an incentive to get back to
work?” asks Dr St John. “More
importantly, do
children's needs diminish because their parents lose
their
jobs?”
To protect children against poverty and
its lifetime legacy of harm, Child
Poverty Action Group
recommends extending the In-Work Tax Credit to
all
families on low incomes, irrespective of the source
of that
income.
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