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Support grows to utilise the nation’s ‘grey army of workers’ without age pension penalty

Sep 02, 2022
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With Australia currently met with a crippling labour shortage, New South Wales Treasurer Matt Kean has called on the Federal Government to change income thresholds for seniors. Source: Getty Images.

As the Albanese Labor Government’s Jobs and Skills Summit kicked off on Thursday, September 1, calls for changes to the age pension rules that would allow older Australians to work without being subject to financial penalties have grown with several key political figures demanding change.

Under current legislation, Australians receiving the age pension are only able to work a certain amount before their payments are reduced. Pensioners can currently earn up to $490 per fortnight without having their payment impacted.

Pensioners lose 50 cents for every dollar earned over the $490 limit.

With Australia currently met with a crippling labour shortage, New South Wales Treasurer Matt Kean has called on the Federal Government to change income thresholds for seniors to not only mend the labour shortage but also allow pensioners to work without being penalised financially.

“We have a grey army of workers who want to get out there and they want to work, but there is no incentive to do so,” he told the Australian Financial Review.

“It’s a win for our pensioners who would benefit from the extra work and socialisation, and also for businesses who would be able to plug some of their vacancies.”

Victorian Premier Dan Andrews supports Kean’s calls for seniors to return to work, claiming that “the notion that we’re penalising people, or keeping them out of the workforce, while every industry is begging for staff, it just doesn’t make any sense to me”.

“I don’t reckon we can afford the luxury of saying, ‘No, you can’t work, we’ll lock you out’, while we’ve got such post-COVID skill shortages in every single industry,” he said.

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton recently called to double the amount age pensioners can earn before their pensions are reduced in an effort to fix current staff shortages.

The $145 million proposal will see the pension income limit raised from the current amount of $300 to $600 a fortnight and still be able to receive the maximum age pension of $987.60 for singles and $1488.80 for couples.

In a statement released by Dutton, the Coalition leader said the policy would “help relieve pressure on a very tight labour market” as well as “put downward pressure on inflation and interest rates”.

“Employers can’t find staff – thousands of jobs across hospitality, agriculture, tourism and retail remain open. This policy ensures that pensioners and veterans, who want to work, are not financially penalised. It puts more money into their pocket,” Dutton said.

“There are around 80,000 age pensioners and veterans who are choosing to work who will likely benefit from this change.”

Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor urged the government to offer seniors “an incentive to do more work without losing their pensions” while citing Dutton’s “very practical suggestion” to e matter.

“There is enough pensioners and veterans out there who want to do extra work that it would make a tangible difference,” Taylor told Sky News.

“We have heard crickets from the Labor Party – nothing, they could have done this, they could have got on with it weeks ago.”

Treasurer Jim Chalmers addressed allowing pensioners to return to work without penalty and changing the income limits, telling ABC Radio that the government has “to weigh up this policy idea of suspending or increasing the work test against the costs and how effective it might be”.

“We’ve put a lot of thought into this and a lot of work into this. In fact, we started working on this before the election and talking with the relevant advocacy groups,” he said.

“It’s hard to get a handle on exactly how many pensioners would be in that boat, they want to work more.

“But again, I’ve tried to be really open‑minded about this.

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“I’ve had a heap of conversations with employers, with unions with advocacy groups like National Seniors. We’ve got an open mind to doing something here, but it needs to be cost effective. It needs to make sense because we have a Budget which is heaving with a trillion dollars of debt and we can’t afford to fund every idea, even ideas which might sound like good ideas on the surface.”

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