The Nation: Judge Andrew Becroft
On The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Judge Andrew
Becroft
Headlines:
The
Children’s Commissioner Judge Andrew Becroft says he’s
recommended to the new government that they index benefits
to average wages or inflation for any household including
children. He says that’s the single most useful thing the
government could do to help the poorest children in the
country.
Judge Becroft
says he’s also discussed a universal basic income with the
government, as well as giving money collected in child
support directly to the parent looking after the
child.
Judge Becroft
says the new government, and future governments, should be
required to set and publish child poverty reduction targets
and report on them every 1-3
years.
Lisa
Owen: A report out this week says the number of kiwi kids
living in poverty has dropped. But the picture is
complicated, and the drop was not big. I spoke to the
Children’s Commissioner Judge Andrew Becroft and asked him
what the report tells
us.
Andrew Becroft: Well, I
think it is good news. For the first time, the stats are
coming down slightly. It is a good basis for future work,
but it’s too early to say if there’s a
trend.
Mm. In terms of that, when you look at
the people surviving on a low income, if you look at the
long-term figures, over about a decade, they have only
oscillated about 1% up, 1% down in terms of decrease or
increase. We are not making a big dent in this. So why
hasn’t anyone been able to make a significant dent in
those figures?
Yeah, I
mean, you’re quite correct. The big increase was
late-‘80’s, early ‘90s, then it has remained, as you
say, with oscillations, fairly stable. I mean, I guess the
answer is no one has actively and purposefully targeted the
issue. I mean, we do well for the senior group in New
Zealand, the over 65s. We do really well, world-leadingly
well. Why don’t we for our children? In the end, I think
it has been a failure to prioritise and to lead. And perhaps
it has been slightly bedevilled by political point-scoring
at times. I think we have got a memorable opportunity now
that we will never get again to do something quite
different. And that is the challenge, I think. And in the
lead-up to the election, there was almost, as I said, not
quite tongue-in-cheek, the danger of consensus breaking out
between the parties. I mean, it was being prioritised,
agreed upon. Now is the time for action, and I look forward
to that.
So basically, we haven’t taken it
seriously enough?
You’d
have to say that on the stats, yes.
So there
are some gains in this report; what do you put it down
to?
Well, the first thing
to say is frustratingly, this report concludes at the 30th
of June 2016 period; such a time lag to get the figures out.
The $25 a week increase for child benefits that the previous
government put in place hadn’t really kicked in. The
increase in Working For Families package hadn’t even
started. I think you would say a stronger economy obviously
always has some effect and lifts the bottom up slightly. I
think we have seen a real rise in the commitment by
charities and NGOs and community groups. I think that is one
of the untold stories; New Zealand, I think, understands the
situation. There is much more of a humanitarian response.
Communities are behind what is going on. Charities are doing
good work. I think that is underestimated in all of this in
terms of providing shoes, clothing, lunches, breakfast. I
think the country as a whole is becoming much more involved,
and I am encouraged by that.
Well, that is
kind of interesting, isn’t it, because if you look at the
two different measures, material deprivation is the one. So
that is where kids are missing out on having a raincoat or a
pair of shoes, these essential items. That is the one where
you have actually seen a reasonably significant decrease in
the number of kids who are deprived. So that is charities.
That is philanthropy. In terms of income poverty: barely a
change. Charities can only give so much, though, can’t
they?
Yeah, that is true. I
think the government has got the ultimate responsibility to
put in a strong safety net, but it can’t just be the
government. It has got to be a sense of all of us involved.
And charities have clearly made a significant contribution
over recent years in particular. That’s encouraging. It
is, as I’ve said, an untold story. The other thing to say
is the material disadvantage measurement is based on
household surveys. So you have got to be in a house to be
part of a household, so it may not be covering those in the
most extreme situations. And it’s an art and not a
science, and not every household survey; I mean, they
don’t survey the same households each
year.
Yes.
It
depends on their being, for instance, the same numbers of
beneficiaries, of sole parents and that sort of thing. It
may not have been quite the same for this year’s survey.
So it just shows you it is the trend we need to see, a
one-off reduction, is hugely encouraging, but it is not
necessarily a trend.
Yeah. Well, you have
previously stated, and on this show, you said you wanted a
10% year-on-year reduction in the number of children in
poverty. So you were meaning both material hardship and
income deprivation with that
measure?
In fact, when on
this programme, I made that very comment, I was primarily
talking about the material deprivation. I think I said the
list of 17 items and enforced hardship when children live in
families without seven of them. And I said it would be good
to see a 10% drop. On these figures, that has
happened.
Yes. But the income figures, the
drop in numbers of kids in those households is only about
1%. 1.7%, it is around about that. So what do you think the
goal should be for reducing income poverty? Should that be
around 10% year on year
too?
Just before I answer
that, let us remember there is two or three measurements for
income poverty. The measurement in our annual review is the
after housing costs, 60% less than the median income. You
could take 50%, you could take 40%; all those are
measurements that no doubt this government and previous
governments will consider. But the after housing costs, 60%
below median income is the hardest to shift. That is the one
that is on our
monitor.
Yes.
If
you took the 50% or the 40%, certainly you would be looking
at 10%. But the after housing 60% is a harder group to
shift.
Okay. So what do you think it should
be? What should the decrease be in that group, then, if we
are going to use that
measure?
I would like to
think at least 5% per year. And I hope that in the new
legislation, that is foreshadowed as being part of the
hundred-days package. I hope there will be an obligation on
all governments to publish targets. Maybe every year or two
or three, there is a report on them. It would be great, in
fact, if this child-poverty monitor was not required every
year, that there was government transparent reporting. That
is what I look forward to.
So on those two
targets that you have said there, the 10% and the 5%, if the
government set targets that do not equal that, would you be
disappointed if they are less ambitious than
that?
Yeah, I think it is crucial
that we set targets. I mean, this is a marathon and not a
sprint. I am not going to die in a ditch over exact numbers.
I have probably made that mistake with you before about 18
months ago. But, I mean, I want to see targets that are
clear. And do not forget, we are heading towards 2030. 2030
is a Sustainable Development Goal time frame, which we have
talked about, halving child poverty by 2030. Now, we need
targets that are going to get us there.
Yes.
And the thing is, though, if you look at those ones that you
have just talked about, if you set targets that are any less
than that, we will struggle to halve poverty by 2030,
won’t we, if we do not set the ones that you’ve just
mentioned: 10% and
5%.
Absolutely. Yeah. In
fact, we could get there quicker if we set them slightly
higher, which would be exciting too. But I agree:
substantially, what you are saying is correct. All I want to
avoid is saying it has got to be exactly this percentage
figure.
So you have kind of touched on this.
Those people who are hovering just below the poverty line,
the so-called low-hanging fruit, it is easier to help them
get over that line. The people who are way below the poverty
line, what is the single biggest thing we could do, the most
significant thing we could do to help
them?
Single biggest
thing?
Yeah.
Very
tempting, and I mean, it is a seductively easy question, but
I would say this in answer to your question: I would love to
see child benefits linked to wages and prices. So we avoid
the occasional increase, and then a gradual decrease. But we
have a continual linking to economic growth. And I think
that is the single best thing that we could
do.
So just to be clear, judge, you are saying
that in households where there are children that the benefit
should be indexed to the average wage in exactly the same
way as Super is?
I mean, it
would probably be harder, because there is complicated
factors in terms of number of children, that sort of thing.
But yes, in principle, that is right. We have to get off the
system we have used at the moment of one-off single
initiatives every six or seven years, where we see an
uptake, then a spike down, and then up again. We have got to
have parity, I think, and relativity. We can’t leave
benefits just to one side.
Have you talked to
the government about that? Will you talk to the government
about it?
Yes and
yes.
And what has been the
response?
Well, I mean, it
is early days, isn’t it? I think we are seeing a package
released next week. We will see, I hope, draft legislation
as part of the hundred-day package within the second of
February, is it? So all will be revealed.
But
you don’t think that is an unrealistic goal? Are you
hopeful that you might make some headway with this
government around that indexing
issue?
Yeah, I am hopeful.
I don’t think that would be, for any government, top of
their list. But if you asked me what I thought would make
the biggest difference, that would be it. I hope we can make
headway on that. What I would like to see in the meantime:
increases in the benefit in the Working For Families package
and to see legislation that commits us to targets. Because
we have to put behind us the three yearly election promises
and then nothing. We need sustained continual committed
effort. And nothing less than that will do
now.
Okay. Well, let’s talk about a couple
of other potential options. Do you think that money
collected, so this is child support collected from estranged
parents or wayward parents: that goes to the state at the
moment; should that be filtered back to the household with
the child in it?
Yeah, that
was the recommendation of the Expert Group on poverty. I
think yes. I think men in particular would be much more
willing and a much greater stake of what’s collected. They
know it is going back to their child. Yes is the answer to
that.
So you would be encouraging this
government to make that
change.
Have
done.
And what was the
response?
Well, we will
see, won’t we?
But were you hopeful about
that as well?
Yes. I mean,
I am hopeful.
The door was left
open?
Yeah. I mean, we have
put what we think are doable policies on the table for the
previous government and this government. I mean, it is clear
where we stand. And the Expert Advisory Group on poverty,
that way predates me. In a sense, I am just a custodian for
this. It was started by the previous Children’s
Commissioner, Dr Russell Wills. It is his legacy, really,
that we are talking about now.
Yeah. And the
point is that you do have a new government, so you can try
again with these things. So you have obviously been through
the list of most of those prime recommendations with this
new government.
Well, we
have talked.
Yeah. Okay. So the other thing is
this government had said that it is not keen to keep the
previous government’s Social Investment policy. Are you
concerned a little bit that ideology might get in the way of
some good ideas?
I mean,
Social Investment is a buzzword that is so value laded now
that it turns people off, but I think it should mean two
things. It must mean helping those most need assistance. But
it can’t just be an individualised approach, because we
have got to be turning the tap off to the process that
causes individuals to be disadvantaged too. So a much wider
conception of Social Investment is to look at those factors
that mean too many New Zealand children are disadvantaged.
So I don’t see it as an either/or; I see it as a both/and,
and I think we need to keep that clearly in
mind.
Benefit cuts, other than the benefit
cuts in the ‘90s, the other sort of seemingly single
biggest factor in all of this is the cost of housing, right?
That has gone up exponentially. Is it the biggest hurdle
that we face in terms of making real progress with this
issue?
Yeah, I think that
is a fair thing to say. That is the crucial issue. As is
well known, for the 20% most disadvantaged families in the
late ‘80s, about a quarter of their income was spent on
accommodation; now for those same families, it’s 52%, 53%
of their income. So it is the single biggest driver, as it
were, I think, that creates disadvantage, and that is where
we should focus. I agree.
And so where is the
policy out for that, then? What can we
do?
Well, we have got the
part of the hundred days. I mean, we were strong in the EAG
report, the Expert report. We said it in recent months that
the accommodation supplement, for instance, which is quite a
complex benefit to understand, could be rationalised and
simplified. It could also be linked to the costs relative to
the different regions. And that could be made clearer. And
what would be word? It could be more sophisticated in terms
of relating to where people live. So I think there is work
to be done there in particular.
And are you
confident that this government is going to do that
work?
Well, you ask me lots
of things, am I confident? I mean, I am not a
politician.
No.
What
we have seen on the whiteboard looks encouraging, but this
government, like any government has got to walk the talk.
And that is what we are waiting to see.
Judge
Becroft, always a pleasure to talk to
you.
Thank
you.
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