
While the third wave of COVID-19 tears through the community, the Coalition government is busy removing supports for the most vulnerable.
It bet its federal budget and the country鈥檚 post-COVID-19 economic recovery on a successful vaccination program that is yet to happen.聽Four months into the program, have been vaccinated.
Nevertheless, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg wants to return to full austerity as quickly as possible, despite the pandemic being far from over and regardless of the poor state of the job market for workers and those looking for work.
Most of the economic recovery used to justify its 鈥渞eturn to pre-COVID-19 normal鈥 has been for the big end of town: it does little to address structural undermining, caused by the insecure work,聽or the fallout from its punitive mutual obligations policies.
The federal government has a plan, described as the "", which it says will "" social security law and reduce the 鈥渁dministrative burden鈥 on job seekers.聽But it takes away the coronavirus supplements, increases face-to-face meeting requirements and further entrenches the punitive work-for-the dole roll-out.
Yet again, the unemployed, under-employed and聽disabled聽will bear the brunt of austerity and its toxic dog whistling 鈥渄ole bludger鈥 rhetoric, masquerading as responsible economic policy.
The proposed changes raise Jobseeker by $25 a聽week (to about $44 a聽day) but remove the coronavirus supplements, leaving many worse off.聽 The amount that can be earned before losing benefits has been raised slightly, but the mutual obligation requirements have too.
As the Minister for Employment, Workforce, Skills, Small and Family Business of Australia "The Prime Minister giveth, and the Prime Minister taketh away". , it is just as well 鈥渕utual obligation鈥 does not apply to ministers.
Despite evidence to the contrary, the government insists its is fair.
In keeping with Scott Morrison鈥檚 Pentecostal-style ideology, that聽if you are unemployed, disabled or disadvantaged it is ,聽the plan also provides potential employers with a dob-in line to report anyone who 鈥渞efuses鈥 to take a job that has been offered.
麻豆传媒聽was unable to establish exactly what this means for job seekers who are forced to apply for remote, or unsustainable, jobs simply to meet the punitive mutual obligation requirements.
Social service organisations continue to call on the government to to at least the level of the poverty line and reinstate the COVID-19 supplements.
Australian Council of Social Services spokesperson Dr Cassandra Goldie said increasing the face-to-face requirements makes no sense during a pandemic and the plan will not help more people find employment.
鈥淚t鈥檚 hard enough to get by on JobSeeker at a brutal $44 a day,鈥 Goldie said.聽鈥淗arsh compliance only adds to the strain without making it more likely that people will find paid work.鈥
Goldie said the government is scapegoating job seekers. 鈥淚nstead of scapegoating people who are unemployed with 鈥榡ob-dobber lines鈥 the federal government should lift its investment in paid work experience and training for people who are still left behind after the deepest recession in living memory.鈥
Social services and advocacy groups聽聽that job seekers rights will be weakened and some will lose hundreds of dollars in payments under the updated mutual obligation system.
The Australian Unemployed Workers Union聽said the government must 鈥済ive certainty to the unemployed, underemployed, people in insecure work, the disabled and everyone else in the welfare system鈥.