Title: Theory Guest Lecture 3 Welfare in Australia
1Theory Guest Lecture 3Welfare in Australia
- Introductory Economics for the Treasury
- Dr. Paul Frijters
2Outline
- 1. Some background statistics and basic terms
- 2. Questions this lecture
3 Population
19.7 million
Workforce age 15
-
64
Non
-
workforce age
67
33
In workforce
Children 0
-
14
Retirees
75
62
38
Not in workforce
25
Voluntary
inactive
Employed
12
94
Homeduties/
childcare
42
Basic Australian stats
Incapa
c
ity
14
Fulltime
72
Educ
a
tion
23
Partime
28
Other
Unemployed
19
6
(a) Some may be in education.
(b) Some sub
-
groups are not exclusive.
4Income terms
- Final income equals the sum of private incomes
and state transfers. - State transfers include direct benefits
(payments) such as disability benefits and child
payments, and indirect benefits, such as
education and subsidised housing.
5Overview of income build up
Source Abelson (2003), page 425
6Forms of private income
7Household (final) Income distribution in Australia
Source ABS, Income Distribution Australia, Cat.
no. 6523.0
8Effect of state transfers in 1999
9Preliminary conclusions
- 1. The state is heavily involved in the build up
of final incomes via transfers (direct and
indirect benefits minus taxes). - 2. The big net gainers are the old, lone parents
(not previously shown) and couples with
school-going children. - 3. The big losers in terms of transfers are those
below 65 without children.
10Age-welfare profiles for men
11Age-welfare profiles for women
Source FACS (1999)
12Conclusion from these stats
- 1. Disability take-up is mostly relevant for
older workers. - 2. The net state transfers are made mostly to the
elderly.
13Disability take-up in the OECD?
Source Frijters and Shields (2003).
14And in Australia?
On disability pension
Facs (Income Support Customers) a Statistical
overview, 1999 and 2000
15Latest data DSP by age in 2003
16Interpretation
- 1. Take-up rates of disability benefits are
especially high amongst the old both in Australia
and elsewhere. - 2. Take-up rates of disability have been going up
everywhere since the 60s but are stabilising the
last decade. They are still rising in Australia.
The current number on DSP is about 700 thousand
are still rising fast - How high can DSP go? The 2003 ABS Survey of
Disability and Health claims there are about 1.3
million Australians with mild or severe
disability, which has been constant the last 5
years. Only half of those are on DSP. The rest
could possibly claim in the future.
17Questions this lecture
- 1. Measures of Poverty and Inequality?
- 2. What is driving the changing situations of
older workers?
18Poverty
- - a household is said to live in poverty if its
material welfare is deemed to be below a poverty
line.
19Who decides the poverty line?
- The researcher or organisation defining it.
20What types of poverty are there?
- 1. Absolute poverty lines, based on the price of
a basket of necessary commodities. This is
chosen in the US. What is considered necessary
changes year by year and is ultimately decided by
government.
21..
- 2. Relative poverty lines. Here, poverty is seen
as having incomes below a certain percentage of
the incomes of others. This is the Australian
poverty line, also known as the Henderson poverty
line. It is currently set at 56.5 of the average
earnings.
22- 3. Subjective poverty lines. In this approach,
poverty corresponds roughly to the dominant
opinion of a group of survey respondents to a
question like what would you consider the
minimum total net income needed for your
household?.
23Common aspects
- - all poverty lines are inherently subjective
either the expert, the government, or the
aggregate respondent decides what the poverty
line is. - - the percentage with incomes below the line is
the headcount ratio. - - inequality and poverty roughly move together
under all definitions.
24- - dealing with household composition is also
subjective and usually done ad hoc poverty lines
are calculated in adult equivalents where the 2nd
adult is considered to need 70 of the first
adult and every child needs 40 of the first
adult. - - internationally, relative poverty lines are
dominant (50 of mean or median).
25Inequality measures
- - the most popular inequality measure is the Gini
coefficient. The higher the Gini, the richer the
rich and the poorer the poor. - - the Gini coefficient can be calculated from the
Lorenz curve, which is the curve indicating the
percentage of total incomes earned by the poorest
x of units.
26Gini and Lorenz
Area A Gini coeff. Minimum 0, maximum 1
27Abelson, page 233
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29Meaning of terms in this table
- 1. SCV (Squared Coefficient of Variation) index
is the sum of the squared deviations of the
income of each individual from that of the
population mean, divided by the square of mean
income. - MLD (Mean Log Deviation) index is the average of
the log ratios of the income of each individual
to the mean income. - 3. Poverty rate (in this table) of household
with less than 50 of average income.
30Conclusion
- 1. Inequality has been increasing in the OECD in
most countries from 1975-1995. The indications
are that poverty has been roughly stable from
1975-1995. - 1a. These two seemingly opposite findings hold
because the rich have been getting richer, whilst
the middle has roughly remained stable. - 2. By cherry-picking different poverty measures
at different times you may claim increasing or
decreasing poverty rates in particular periods.
31Important caveat
- 1. Beware of the unit of analysis in poverty and
inequality data! Poverty of heads-of-households
or individuals is something completely different
from poverty of whole households! - 2. Generally speaking, income inequality amongst
individuals has decreased (more people have
earnings), whilst inequality amongst households
has increased (the poor increasingly marry the
poor and the rich increasingly marry the rich).
32What is happening to older workers
- Candidates
- - Incentives pension schemes, disability
schemes. - - Production long-term changes in the value of
different activities.
33Incentives pension schemes
- Recall the pension profile of two schemes.
- Defined contribution
- 2) Pension rights defined from last-earned income.
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35Incentives disability schemes
- Most OECD countries introduced wide-coverage
disability schemes in the 50s and 60s. Most
have expanded them in the last decades. - Potential abuse a combination of employers and
employees leaning on low-productive (unhealthy)
workers to take disability benefits rather than
be fired. This is especially problematic if the
benefits are paid from general funds (free-rider
issues).
36Background (production) trends
- Work in the OECD has become more specialised and
its content is changing more rapidly - - Skills deteriorate faster, which hits older
workers especially hard. - - Work is becoming more mentally demanding,
leading to higher psychological demands.
37A stress epidemic?
Estimated Days lost due to stress per worker per
year. Source Frijters and Shields (2003)
38And who is on disability here?
39Interpretation
- 1. A lot of individuals on disability are having
psychological problems. Relatively more so for
younger disabled persons, consistent with the
changing technology explanation. - 2. Back pain (musculo-skeletal) seems to be
important for older workers. - 3. Neither back pain nor psychological problems
are easy to verify medically.
40Conclusion?
- 1. We do not truly know the underlying cause of
the disability explosion since the 60s. Could be
either incentives or a fundamental change in what
is demanded of workers. - 1a. What we do know is that on disability
benefits are generally the oldest, the least
healthy, and the least earning of the potential
workforce. - 1b. Policy options are very similar to those of
dealing with poverty traps.