Beneficiary saves the tax payer $400,000
Poverty Action Waikato
September 22 2011
Beneficiary saves the tax payer $400,000
“Single parents who
receive government benefits not only make a
significant
contribution to our society in parenting
their children, but their other
often unrecognised work
can save hundreds of thousands of dollars in tax
payer
money” says Tony Westbrook, Kaitiaki member, Poverty
Action Waikato.
The woman profiled in the recent Waikato
Times front page article as
Waikato’s longest claiming
beneficiary has been caring for her sick, elderly
mother
for the last 10 years. Brent Selwyn, a specialist in elderly
services
and seniors law states that it costs between
$40,000 and $42,000 per annum
to keep a person in senior
care. According to these figures, the work of the
woman
in this article has saved the taxpayer around $400,000 in
senior care
costs.
“Parenting, along with caring for
the sick and elderly is essential work and
it needs to be
recognised, valued and supported by all of us and by
our
economic system” says Anna Cox, Researcher, Poverty
Action Waikato.
In May 2011 a Waikato Times front page
article ‘Count down for a job’
outlined how 1000
hopefuls queued for hours competing for 140
Hamilton
supermarket jobs.
“It is simply misleading
to suggest that many beneficiaries chose to
remain
unemployed when there is such extreme competition
for the paid work that is
available. A lack of paid
employment opportunities is currently the
most
significant cause of people remaining on a benefit,
and it is getting worse”
Westbrook says.
Figures from
the Department of Labour show that the unemployment rate
in
Waikato increased by 0.8% - from 5.9% in the year to
June 2010 to 6.7% for
the year to June 2011. The
national average for unemployment was 6.6% in
June
2011.
“There is a real danger in not carrying out a full
analysis of an issue, or
situation, as hidden benefits
that are significant to the country can be
overlooked.
Individuals creating savings worth hundreds of thousands
of
dollars to the country can be unfairly vilified when
they are actually
fulfilling a very valuable role” he
says.
Poverty Action Waikato, together with Link House and
Birthright Waikato will
be holding a pre-election forum
on October 28th where election candidates
will get to
listen to the experiences and realities of single parents
and
discuss how government policies can better support
their valuable
parenting
work.
ENDS