on 02-05-2013 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 03-05-2013 02:17 PM
Anybody can become angry - that is easy, but to be angry with the right person and to the right degree and at the right time and for the right purpose, and in the right way - that is not within everybody's power and is not easy.
Aristotle
on 03-05-2013 02:30 PM
"...the moral test of government is how that government treats those who are in the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life, the elderly; those who are in the shadows of life; the sick, the needy and the handicapped. "
Last Speech of Hubert H. Humphrey
"A nation's greatness is measured by how it treats its weakest members."
Mahatma Gandhi.
Our society must make it right and possible for old people not to fear the young or be deserted by them, for the test of a civilization is the way that it cares for its helpless members.
Pearl S. Buck
The most certain test by which we judge whether a country is really free is the amount of security enjoyed by minorities.
John E. E. Dalberg, Lord Acton,
"Any society, any nation, is judged on the basis of how it treats its weakest members -- the last, the least, the littlest."
Cardinal Roger Mahony,
on 03-05-2013 02:37 PM
😮
😮
on 03-05-2013 02:45 PM
yes i too was shocked that jane spelled obnoxious wrong. 😮
on 03-05-2013 02:47 PM
pay my taxes to support you and your non-white grandchild and sister!
not that it would be an issue for my half sister to be called non-white...the fact is that she is what you may refer to as 'all white' same as my Grandson.
My Eldest son's Grandmother was born in africa ..she went to England to study to become a teacher..it was here she met and later married the Good Dr (of Law) my son's paternal Grandfather ("white' Australian).Her and their son (my eldest son's Father) came to Australia after their son was born.
on 03-05-2013 02:53 PM
Jane, I am a bit confused by your reference to going to work to support someone's "non-white" grandchild and sister.
Are you suggesting that:
a) being non-white makes a person disabled,
b) being non-white makes a person undeserving of support.
c) Both of the above.
A little clarification would be helpful
on 03-05-2013 05:20 PM
speaking of how our society cares for their aged... so how well do we do that?
Apparently, the members of our current aged population (our retired people) were led to believe that if they worked hard and paid their tax, that they would be looked after during their retirement.
So, how's that going?
Our elderly are being afforded a decent standard of living? They can go to the doctor whenever they need to and can afford their medicines? They can afford their heating bills? Their housing?
pfft - the coffers can't even cope with the promises that have already been made, yet they keep squeezing more out of them..
So what happens in 30 years time when the NDIS money is not enough? what happens to all those people who for 30 years paid their taxes for access to a system that they will no longer be able to access?
Same as the pension, same as our education - we will just have to deal with substandard service and hope that somehow we can still find a private providor to meet the short fall
on 03-05-2013 05:26 PM
I hear you janeababe.
I understand what you've said.
And I agree.
on 03-05-2013 05:28 PM
The NDIS will mean the abolishment of fault based compensation payouts. When these payouts are determined, the money awarded is a prediction for the needs of that person foir the rest of their life.
So now we want to abolish that system, but what happens in 20 years time when they can no longer afford to care for and support someone, and they were denied their right to seek adequate compensation.
Those subjected to traumatic injuries and illnesses are already largely catered for, it's those that suffer non traumatic injuries/illnesses, that have no assistance in our current system, so it's those whose needs need to be addressed, but this system just aint capable of being sustainable as it is currently proposed, so the very people they are claiming to help will be abandoned anyway and the systems alrteady in place to aid at least some people will have been disbanded.
Has no one yet made the connection between the fake Insurance crisis, the caps on worker's compenastion insurance and this current short sighted fairytale?
on 03-05-2013 05:28 PM
Give us the answers then Crikey.