Last week was anti-poverty week, and amid all the stories about reductions in the entitlements of single parents and the paucity of the Newstart allowance rate
this one caught my eye. Although it didn't deal directly with the issue, the case seems to involve, among other things, a single parent who has part-care of his children. The comments that follow the article express various levels of support and/or sympathy mixed with the usual "get a job" sentiments. There are also some questioning the amount of assistance he received, which appears to be just single Newstart allowance - no payments in respect of his children.
Part-care of children brings with it some complicated rules around how much, if any, family assistance can be paid, with similar provisions around child support entitlements or liabilities. At the extremes, a parent with no care of their child won't receive any child-related assistance, and will generally have to
pay child support, whereas a parent with 100% of the care gets all the child-related assistance and will generally
receive child support. As care increases from zero there is a kind-of graduated sharing of family assistance entitlements. I say "kind-of" because it's not a smooth transition - the family assistance amounts change in a lumpy way over some percentage ranges, not at all over others, and disproportionately in the rest.
A further complication is that adult income support also undergoes changes related to the level of care of the child.
There are many possible combinations of care and payment types but I'll just focus on three as they will illustrate most of the points.