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Report: Almost one million Aussies are claiming long-term welfare

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New South Wales has the highest number of welfare recipients. Source: Getty.

The number of Australians claiming long-term welfare payments, such as Newstart and the Youth Allowance, has risen drastically over the past five years, taking the overall total to almost one million recipients.

New data released by the Department of Social Services revealed a total of 765,424 Aussies have been in receipt of welfare payments for at least five consecutive years.

The figures also showed that the total number of Aussies claiming benefits has risen by more than 120,000 over the past five years, as the number of people claiming cash handouts long-term was just 644,028 in 2013.

These payments include Newstart, Youth Allowance and the Disability Support Pension, and more than half of all welfare recipients who have been in receipt of payments for the past decade started when they were aged in their 20s and 30s.

Social Services Minister Dan Tehan told the Herald Sun that welfare dependency costs Aussie taxpayers billions of dollars each year. He also said that children whose parents received welfare may be more likely to depend on the government payments themselves.

The data also shows thousands of people being forced off the Disability Support Pension (DSP) and onto the dole, due to changes to the eligibility criteria for the DSP. The changes which came into effect in 2012, have resulted in a reduction of 73,899 in DSP recipients over five years, but 54,505 more people have signed up to Newstart.

It was also recently revealed that Centrelink will introduce new biometric security measures for claimants, including those on the Age Pension. Earlier this month the coalition government confirmed that facial recognition technology will be utilised in a bid to deter fraudsters.

The new system will require welfare recipients, including those in receipt of the Age Pension, disability pension and rent assistance, to take a photo of themselves using a camera or mobile phone and upload it to the government site.

It will then be compared to an official form of identification, such as a passport or driver’s licence, to confirm the claimant’s identity and allow the user to access their online account in order to claim their benefits. Government officials also hope it will make it harder for anyone attempting to fraudulently claim benefits to do so.

At the time, Minister for Human Services Michael Keenan said: “As a nation, we are already a long way down the road toward becoming a truly digital government and we should be proud of what we have achieved so far.

“We are already three years into a seven-year program to digitally transform the welfare payment system which will eventually enable all benefit types to be claimed and processed online. The advantages of achieving this goal are enormous.

“Digitisation will also deliver significant cost savings for Government. At present, a traditional over the counter transaction such as registering a business name costs taxpayers $17 to process on average. By enabling transactions to be conducted entirely online, the cost of processing can drop to as little as about 40 cents.

“The key to ensuring online transactions are conducted securely is the development of a trusted digital identity solution. Think of it as a 100-point digital ID check that will unlock access to almost any government agency through a single portal such as a myGov account.”

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