Welfare payment boost to help 4.7 million Australians as cost of living bites

Soaring cost of living pressures for almost five million Australians will be eased with welfare payments set to rise significantly later this month.

Social Services Minister Amanda Rishworth

Social Services Minister Amanda Rishworth says an indexation increase to welfare payments set to kick in on 20 September. Source: AAP / Morgan Sette

Key Points
  • Soaring cost of living pressures for almost five million Australians will be eased with welfare payments.
  • More than 4.7 million Australians struggling to cope with cost of living pressures.
More than 4.7 million Australians struggling to cope with cost of living pressures are in line for a helping hand.

Social Services Minister Amanda Rishworth says an indexation increase to welfare payments set to kick in on 20 September will be the largest in more than 30 years for allowances and 12 years for pensions.

"We want to ensure Australia has a strong social security safety net to protect our most disadvantaged," she said on Monday.

"Our guiding principles as a government are ensuring no one is left behind and no one is held back and this indexation increase will help those on government payments keep up with the cost of living."
Increases will apply to the following payments:
  • Age Pension, Disability Support Pension and Carer Payment will all rise $38.90 a fortnight for singles and $58.80 a fortnight for couples.
  • The maximum rate of pension will increase to $1,026.50 a fortnight for singles and $773.80 for each member of a pensioner couple or $1,547.60 per couple.
  • JobSeeker, Parenting Payment, ABSTUDY and Rent Assistance recipients will also get a top up.
  • JobSeeker for singles without children will increase $25.70 a fortnight to $677.20, while Parenting Payment Single will rise $35.20 a fortnight to $927.40.
  • The rate for partnered JobSeeker Payment and Parenting Payment recipients will increase $23.40 a fortnight to $616.60.
The pension raise was driven by increases in the Consumer Price Index, which exceeded the increase in the Pensioner and Beneficiary Living Cost Index.

Flagging the move in July, Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the government understood pensioners were doing it "incredibly tough when it comes to their costs of essentials like groceries, electricity and petrol and in other parts of the household budget".

The increases also follow the government's skills summit announcement that some pension recipients will be able to earn more without having payments reduced.


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2 min read
Published 5 September 2022 7:28am
Updated 6 September 2022 8:19am
Source: AAP



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