on โ02-05-2013 09:13 AM
And not just because it would make us all feel warm and fuzzy. There are good, hard-headed economic arguments for increasing our disability spend which is currently below many OECD countries.
PAUL Prendergast is the father of a 26-year-old daughter who - he states proudly - enjoys an "active social life, attendance of a drama group and a dance group and 10-pin bowling".
But Mr Prendergast's daughter also has Down syndrome and, like many ageing parents of a disabled child, he worries about his daughter's future. He fears she will end up in an aged care facility when he and his wife die.
"This thought fills us with dread as our daughter's quality of life would evaporate should she be housed far from her friends and activities," he wrote in a submission to the Productivity Commission's 2010 inquiry into disability care.
Trevor and Trish Browning's daughter died at just 13. In their submission, they describe the "constant battle to get assistance" for their daughter who suffered Rhett syndrome.
"We had to fight for every aid and facility" they wrote. "We saw so many people just give up in despair as they did not have the stamina or time to take on the myriad Government departments and agencies that purport to provide services."
These are just two of the heartbreaking stories contained in the more than 1000 public submissions to the Commission's inquiry. They detail the "emotional and financial roller coaster", the "humiliation and isolation" and "unrelenting and huge" stresses of living with a disability in this country.
Truth is, disability could happen to any one of us, at any time.
All of us face the very real possibility of having a child with a disability or suffering from a catastrophic injury ourselves.
So all Australians have an interest in providing better services and care for the sick and the disabled.
And not just because it would make us all feel warm and fuzzy. There are good, hard-headed economic arguments for increasing our disability spend which is currently below many OECD countries.
Australia has the seventh lowest employment rate for people with disabilities in the OECD.
Better support for disabled people wanting to enter the workforce could lift gross domestic product by a full percentage point by 2050, or $32 billion in today's prices, according to the Productivity Commission. Not only would these new workers pay income tax, they would require less income support.
There would be other benefits, too, from improving the wellbeing of people with disabilities and their carers, efficiency gains through better provision of services and reduced strain on hospital budgets from caring for disabled people.
"The bottom line is that benefits of the NDIS would significantly exceed the additional costs of the scheme," the Commission found.
Which leaves us with the thorny question of just who is going to pay?
In outlining the extra $6.5 billion a year needed to bring disability care funding up to acceptable levels, the Productivity Commission did not stipulate how this should be funded. But it did stress the funding would need to be secure and stable into the future.
Raising the GST was one option canvassed. A Medicare-style levy was the other and it appears the Government is readying to do just that in the May Budget.
The Government currently raises $9.6 billion a year through the Medicare levy which is a 1.5 per cent tax on all taxpayers earning more than around $24,000. Boosting this levy by 0.5 percentage points would raise an extra $3.2 billion a year. A person earning $50,000 would pay about $250 more a year.
Alternatively, the Government could impose a separate 1 per cent "disability care and support premium" which would raise around $6.4 billion a year - enough to fund the NDIS in its entirety.
There are several advantages to such a levy, particularly if badged as an insurance premium. According to the Commission: "There is some value in using the word `premium' instead of tax or levy because it would make it clear that every taxpayer is getting a service - namely an insurance product, that provides him or her with disability supports if they are required."
But let's not sugar coat it.
Any new levy would essentially be an increase to all personal income tax rates.
Such a hike would go some way to taking back some of the unsustainable tax cuts handed out by the Howard and Rudd governments which were funded by a once-in-a-century mining boom which has just run out of puff.
The downside of a levy is that it would add more complexity to the already complex tax system. But given the unpopularity of raising personal income tax rates, such chicanery may be necessary.
There is also a risk that a disabilities levy would make people less inclined to make separate charitable donations to disability care. But the certainty of funding would be worth it.
If set too low, the levy could also risk giving the false impression that it fully funds the cost of the scheme. Indeed, the Medicare levy doesn't come close to funding all Medicare linked services.
The bottom line is that the money for disability care must come from somewhere. And that somewhere is us.
The Government must make every effort to cut wasteful spending and remove unfair tax concessions. But it's clear that taxes must rise too to meet the Budget challenge.
So how about it? Are you willing to chip in a little extra to support those suffering the most in our community, like the Prendergasts and the Brownings?
Are you willing to pay a little insurance for the fact that it could be you, or someone you love, one day? I am.
on โ04-05-2013 08:27 AM
have you worked it out yet Jane ?
Read my posts please.
on โ04-05-2013 08:34 AM
Jane.... I get enough emails to indicate I am not a fence sitter.... I saw that post as unnecessarily rude and nasty, that is how I read it...that is my opinion.
I can make any stance I choose.... as you did... you posted, I commented, that is how it works and I don't care who you are, that would still be my comment.
I don't think posters are stupid because I don't agree with them, if they annoy me to that point, I skim past.
on โ04-05-2013 10:00 AM
JANE , I believe you have taken what IZA said about her son and sister out of context. I think that is what TWINKLES is referring to as well.
I also agree with IZA that your post was offensive, as was your last one, I would not describe them as simply being blunt at all.
I do agree with some of the points you made in that long post, but the way you put it was not nice.
I skim past posts that I don't wish to read generally, usually works for me...
on โ04-05-2013 11:16 AM
Before we all start getting too precious about how the Government should or should not be spending our hard earned cash there is something we would all do well to remember. Every single one of us here - working or not - is a taxpayer. Every time we buy a bar of chocolate, go to the cinema, put petrol in our car, pay our gas or electricity bill or hire a tradesman we pay tax. So while Jane's taxes may be supporting Iza,grandchildren, Iza's taxes are subsidising the education of Azureline's grandchildren, Az's taxes are subsidising my pension, my taxes are subsidising Freddie's medical treatment and Freddie's taxes are subsidising Crikey's law studies.
It's a circle of mutual dependence and assistance -so to show our support for Freddie, I reckon we should all go out and buy two bars of chocolate every day next week.
on โ04-05-2013 04:56 PM
I too am not happy with the new tax but as mlor said low income earners will support it as it will not affect them greatly, middle income earners will be the ones hardest hit and people on benefits probably wont contribute at all.
If I thought it would go completely and without a lot of waste to the disability scheme then I would be happy to pay 1% which should fund it without coming back for more.
I still dont think the government has the figures right anyway.
on โ04-05-2013 11:30 PM
I'm quite happy to pay the average. Sick to death of paying so much more because we have chosen to make sacrifices (husband not home every night)
Why the hell should we pay more for something we are less likely to need , and that is if it isn't means tested. We might be paying for something we cant use anyway.
on โ05-05-2013 08:57 AM
Wow no need to get nasty if you are against it then fine, everyone is entitled to an opinion.
Jane I think what comes around goes around, you need to remember that today's pensioners paid taxes in their day to fund many things so I am not sure that's really an argument.
The other thing is I was reading about some of the things the NDIS would cover, bear in mind that the existing services that cover some of those things that will probably be either scrapped or combined into the scheme ie aides and equipment that currently funds some of the things listed.
The bottom line is in this country at the moment there is little support for those who are severely disabled and unable to support themselves. Often parents support them all their lives but the day comes when they die and can no longer do so. We need a safety net to protect these people, currently its pathetic and does little for them.
I think by adequately supporting the severely disabled it will free up nursing homes and other services thus actually improving health in this country overall.
Personally I'd like to see all the state surrender state supports and funds to pool into the NDIS and see disability packages come out of that instead.
on โ05-05-2013 03:10 PM
here it is....
Worked it out yet?????
*sigh* ;\
The fact of the matter is that I clearly stated somewhere that I have both male and female homosexual friends, as well as black/coloured friends, so can someone please tell me how that makes me both racist and having a down on gays?
A couple or so weeks back someone was boasting to me on here about their time in the UK waving banners and protesting in front of the South African embassy in London in support of the downfall of apartheid while asking me what I was doing at the same time concerning the issues in my original homeland, SA.
What I didn't bother making clear then (because I didn't think it was anyone else's business) was that I was in and out of SA from the UK, Australia and Kenya risking my life (together with others like me) smuggling out both blacks and whites who we knew were at extreme risk of being murdered just because they happened to think differently to those both in power at the time, and those who wanted to be.
I will be returning to SA via Kenya later this year when I will be escorting some much needed medical supplies into SA that a group of like minded people living here in Australia and I know many more black Africans will die without, because I have never turned my back on my original homeland, and never shall.
That's my personal idea of a holiday lol.
I have never cared what the colour of anyone's skin is, or their sexual preference just so long as they respect my personal way of thinking and being.
on โ05-05-2013 03:15 PM
LT.... you need to get a hobby......do you ever have an opinion about something other than me?
on โ05-05-2013 04:18 PM
My kids don't do that.... sorry to disappoint... but then, you know that don't you?
I have my own set of guidelines.....