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Middle Class Welfare in Australia Presentation to Welfare Future Conference, Melbourne 31 October 2014 Ben Phillips Principal Research Fellow

Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

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Ben Phillips delivered the presentation at the 2014 Future of Welfare Conference. The 2014 Future of Welfare Conference examined the welfare system and the policy and reform directions for welfare in Australia. The two day event looked at the concept of social welfare, the evolution of thinking worldwide around welfare, and also the current realities and policy directions in Australia. For more information about the event, please visit: http://bit.ly/futureofwelfare14

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Page 1: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

Middle Class Welfare in Australia

Presentation to Welfare Future Conference, Melbourne– 31 October 2014

Ben Phillips

Principal Research Fellow

Page 2: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

Introduction

● What is middle class?

● What is middle class welfare?

● STINMOD modelling

● How much middle class welfare is there in Australia and what are the main elements?

● Poverty in Australia

● Impact of Federal Budget on middle class welfare?

● Future of middle class welfare?

Page 3: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

What is middle class

● This is not entirely clear

● Do we base class on income, expenditure, assets, or is it more a social structure/position?

● For the purpose of this presentation and simplicity I’ll consider middle class to be the middle 20% of the income distribution.

● Couple with two kids - $75,000 - $100,000 family income

● Single person - $35,000 to $50,000

● It’s probably a bit broader than this

● A simplification – older families who largely own their own home are hard to compare with a younger FHB family. Old children cost more etc… it’s complicated.

Page 4: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

STINMOD - introduction

• STINMOD is a microsimulation tool developed by NATSEM for the Commonwealth from 1994.

• Simulates the tax and transfer system of Australia (for individuals and families) using actual data on real families from ABS income surveys.

• Provides a unique ability to model the ‘distributional’ impact of existing and alternative policies and offers a very detailed snapshot of the Australian population at a given point in time or projection into the future.

• Two standard models – hypothetical and distributional

• Modelled results are benchmarked to administration totals such as the number of pensioners, family payments, unemployed etc..

Page 5: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

STINMOD - introduction

• STINMOD is heavily relied upon by the Commonwealth for the modelling

policy change for most of the important government payments and personal

income tax

• Particularly useful for new policy ‘packages’ where administration data lacks

the detail to deal with a range of policy areas, or where policy change

introduces new customers.

• The most famous examples of STINMOD include the introduction of the ANTS

package (GST 2000), welfare to work (2006) and the Carbon Price package in

2012 and 2014-15 budget.

• Regional modelling combines STINMOD with Census/admin regional profiles

• Available as a simple interface version – point and click or much more

complicated ‘source code’ version.

Page 6: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

Welfare distribution

$179 $158

$67

$21 $6

$84 $139

$76

$18

$2

$125

$159

$101

$66

$31

$0

$50

$100

$150

$200

$250

$300

$350

$400

$450

$500

Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5

Distribution of Welfare Payments (Households), STINMOD, 2014

Aged Pension FTB Other Payments

Page 7: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

Welfare distribution

31%

37%

20%

9% 3%

Total Government Transfers, STINMOD, 2014

Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5

Page 8: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

Welfare distribution

0

200000

400000

600000

800000

1000000

1200000

Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5

Payments recipient numbers by income group

Age Pension Other pension Allowees

Page 9: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

Welfare distribution

• Where is the middle class welfare (payments)

● Child Care (CCR universal 50% out of pocket costs)

● FTB (particularly Part B – budget 2014-15 has improved this situation)

● FTB – poverty measure for low income families and tapered away to avoid poverty traps + provides ‘tax justice’

● Reality is that middle to high income families don’t receive a large share of FTB but savings can be made in this area.

● Budget was largely about reducing the payment across the board – stealthy indexation pauses and FTB B (once youngest hits 6 or income > $100K) removal the biggest impact.

● PPL – new scheme for 2015 will significantly increase the middle class and high income welfare in Australia

Page 10: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

Childcare distribution

Page 11: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

Other middle class payments/tax expenditures

• First home buyers grants (largely middle income)

• Negative gearing (property/other investments) (largely middle income)

• Capital gains tax

• Owner occupier housing

• Superannuation

• Trusts

• Salary Sacrificed vehicles

• These are where significant middle class (and upper class) welfare is.

Page 12: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

In-kind government support

$87 $70 $36 $30 $14

$93 $149

$176 $152

$117

$253

$260 $219

$198

$187

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

1 2 3 4 5

In-kind Government Support by income quintile, STINMOD14

Welfare in-kind Education in-kind Health in-kind

Page 13: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

In-kind government support

Page 14: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

Benefits - trends • Remains heavily skewed to low income families

• Small increase under Labor in middle income welfare – can be distorted by

broader demographic/economic conditions and largest influence remains

pension/DSP – not necessarily policy changes driving result.

31%

45%

18%

6%

1%

35%

42%

16%

5%

1%

28%

44%

21%

5%

1%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

50%

Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5

Welfare Distribution by Income level - share of taxable income

2002 2007 2012

Page 15: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

Poverty

Page 16: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

Budget Impact

Page 17: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

Conclusion • With respect to government cash payments middle class welfare is not as substantial as often suggested.

• Cash payments are generally well targeted with the major payments (pensions, allowances) directed

heavily towards the bottom 40% of income distribution

• Family payments do have a middle class welfare element – although majority directed at low income

families.

• Largest element of middle class ‘welfare’ belongs to in-kind health and education services and tax

expenditures.

• Budget does remove some welfare to middle income but is proportionately directed at low income

groups and is highly regressive.

• Future? Influenced by economy, demographics, policy – current government looking to reduce benefits

and reduce taxation – clearly less progressive.

• Demographically – older population implies increased pensions/health reduced relative share of

education

Page 18: Ben Phillips - National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling - Focus Session Middle class welfare

Thank You