Taxing the family : Australia’s forgotten people in the income spectrum

Lucy SullivanAugust 22, 2001PM50

Over the last two decades, the tax burden has shifted from taxpayers without to taxpayers with dependent children.  While social security expenditure on welfare dependency has risen, spending on family income protection has fallen.
Sullivan argues for a return to the protection of family incomes via tax rebates available to all families. ‘The current targeted family welfare approach, which replaced tax rebates in the 1980s, means that working families are living on incomes little different from equivalent families who are entirely dependent on welfare’.
‘It encourages family welfare dependency, and gives power and jobs to the welfare bureaucracy, whereas the taxation approach is minimalist in bureaucratic terms and promotes family autonomy’, says Sullivan.
Primary effects of the withdrawal of family income protection are:

  • Family standards of living are well below those of tax payers without dependents.
  • Falling birth rate
  • Mothers working beyond their preference

Secondary effects are:

  • Reduced quantity and quality of parenting
  • A growing number of families entirely dependent on welfare

Sullivan advocates child tax rebates that are available at the same level to all families. These could replace – at a modest additional cost to revenue, and with no lowering of welfare incomes – the current complexity of family payments directed at lower income levels and also the generous childcare payments and subsidies available only to mothers who work.
This has a real chance, she predicts, of reversing the drift of families into welfare dependency and is able ultimately to produce savings’

 

Related Commentary

Subsidies, safety nets and stagnation: Australia’s new economic model
Michael StutchburyApril 11, 2026AUSTRALIAN FINANCIAL REVIEW
Protecting one industry imposes a burden on the competitive sectors that actually prop up our...
The mental health system may be making us sicker
Steven SchwartzApril 6, 2026CANBERRA TIMES

Australia has a mental health crisis, but not the one we think. Despite decades of...

Housing negative gearing tax
Reducing the discount would likely not have any lasting impact in lowering house prices
Robert Carling, Michael StutchburyMarch 21, 2026CANBERRA TIMES

Anyone watching the smoke signals from Canberra knows that moves are afoot to try and...

• Subscribe

Subscribe now and stay in the loop with our giving appeals, event alerts, newsletters and research updates.

We are always pleased to hear from you. If you have any questions or feedback, please contact us here: