Prime Minister John Key Tuesday 23 March 2010, 2:27PM
Prime Minister John Key 23 March 2010 speech
notes
The Minister is going to talk about the details of our benefit
reform package in a
moment, but I am going to start by giving you a broad overview of
what we are doing
and why.
The first thing I want to say is that when Minister Bennett and I
talk about the welfare
system we are doing so with a healthy amount of first-hand
experience.
When I was young, and my father died, my mother relied on the
Widows Benefit until
she could get back on her feet and into a job.
The Minister was a young sole parent who received the Domestic
Purposes Benefit
on and off for a number of years.
As a result, both of us have a strong commitment to the safety net
that welfare
provides.
We believe in a welfare system that supports people when they are
most in need,
encourages them to get back to work, and occasionally gives them a
kick in the pants
when they are not taking responsibility for themselves, their
family, and other
taxpayers.
Currently there are around 345,000 working-age people receiving a
benefit.
Some people on a benefit will realistically never be able to work
and the welfare
system will continue to support them.
But for most people, a benefit should only provide temporary
support until they can
return to work.
In fact there is little chance of a better future for beneficiaries
and their
children unless they do come off a benefit and work for an income.
Long-term welfare
dependency imprisons people in a life of limited income and limited
choices.
Many people on a benefit can't wait to take the step back into work
and we should
applaud them for that. Some are fearful of it, however, and others
are downright
resentful. But the world of work is always going to offer more
possibilities than the
limitations of welfare.
There's another factor here, too.
People who receive a benefit are able to do so only because others
are going to work
every day, earning a wage and paying taxes. In many cases these are
people who
are themselves far from well off.
So it's not fair on working New Zealanders to have people receiving
benefits but not
making every reasonable attempt to pick themselves up, find a job,
and stand on
their own two feet.
For these reasons, our benefit reforms are squarely focused on
getting people back
to work as soon as possible.
These reforms will seem very familiar to many of you because they
are, with a few
tweaks, what we campaigned on at the last election.
Out of the whole package there are five aspects I'd like to outline
briefly.
First, the Government is going to introduce part-time work
obligations for two new
groups of beneficiaries.
These are DPB recipients whose youngest child is aged six or over,
and people on a
Sickness Benefit who have been assessed as being able to work part
time.
These people will need to be available for part-time work of at
least 15 hours a week
and accept suitable job offers, or undertake work-related
training.
Work and Income will, however, have a good deal of flexibility
around people's
individual circumstances. And where people do not have the skills
to get a job we will
work with them to help them gain the skills they need.
Second, the Government will introduce more graduated sanctions for
people who
don't comply with their work obligations.
At the moment, case managers have only one real sanction and that
is to stop
benefit payments altogether.
The Government is going to give case managers more flexibility, and
a better range
of tools, by introducing an intermediate step of a 50 percent
reduction in the person's
benefit, followed by full suspension and then cancellation of the
benefit.
Where beneficiaries have children in their care, however, they will
face a maximum
sanction of half their benefit.
The third part of the package I want to highlight is an increase in
the amount that
people on the DPB and Invalids Benefit can earn each week, without
affecting their
benefit, from $80 to $100. This will happen together with some
other adjustments to
abatement thresholds.
These changes will give beneficiaries an additional incentive to
work a few hours a
week, get into the work habit, gain some confidence, and start
building work skills.
Fourth, the Government is going to change the rules around the
Unemployment
Benefit so it can only be granted for a 12-month period.
People who are still looking for work a year after going onto the
Unemployment
Benefit will have to reapply for their benefit.
As part of that process they will have to complete a comprehensive
work assessment
to determine what steps they need to take to move into or towards
work.
These new rules will provide a strong signal that the Unemployment
Benefit is a
temporary support only, for people who are actively seeking
work.
The last part of the package I want to mention is a system of more
frequent
reassessment for people on the Sickness Benefit.
The first two medical certificates issued to a sickness beneficiary
will now be for a
maximum of only four weeks each. This will ensure more attention
from the person's
doctor and case manager during the all-important first two months
on the benefit.
People on a Sickness Benefit will also face a compulsory
reassessment by their case
manager after 12 months, and this may involve a referral to a
designated doctor.
It is important to note that the reforms we are announcing today
are not focused on
saving money in the short term; they are focused on improving
outcomes for
beneficiaries.
Over the medium-to-longer-term, however, these changes will help
with the
sustainability of the welfare system. For example, if we were to
assist just five
percent of sole parents with a youngest child aged over six into
work, there would be
a saving of almost $200 million over the next 10 years.
While these reforms will improve the benefit system, there is still
more work to be
done. The Government remains concerned about the prospects of a
growing welfare
roll in the decades ahead, accompanied of course by an increasing
welfare bill.
I signalled in my Statement to Parliament that we would be
establishing a working
group to advise us on ways to reduce long-term dependency on
welfare.
That process is going along well and we will soon be able to
announce the membership and terms of reference for this
group.
Today, however, is about the Government's package of benefit
reforms and I'd like to
hand over the Minister to talk through it in more detail.