The New Year is prime time for taking a look at the household budget.
But as you plot out how to negotiate the year ahead, it’s worth noting there are a few new things you may need to factor in (or should that be factor out?) this time around.
They relate to your family benefits.
Extensive changes to these and several Centrelink payments have been announced since the belt-tightening 2016 federal budget that will directly impact millions of Australian households.
Here are some of the most crucial.
You won’t get a Schoolkids’ Bonus.
Previously, families received $430 for each child in primary school and $856 for each child in secondary school, which was automatically deposited in two instalments – one in January and one in July.
But there will be no such payments coming this month.
The scheme, designed to help families cover costs associated with their child’s education (eg. school fees, stationary, books and uniforms) was scrapped last year.
You may no longer receive a Family Tax Benefit supplement.
As of this financial year, only families with a combined income of less than $80,000 will be eligible for the FTB Part A supplement.
This will mean plenty of families will lose out on the lump-sum payment of up to $726 per child come tax time.
Top Comments
As a single income family soon to be 6 on 90 000 a year we will be able to tighten our belts and get by without too much trouble, we already don't take holidays and buy all clothes second hand etc. but there will be room to save without starving.
But when i was a kid growing up as this would have been a disaster for my single part time employed mother of 4. At one point during my high school years the soles of my school shoes were held on by wrapping shoe laces around the whole shoe. There was never enough sanitary items to go around so when I and my sisters had our periods and we often had to make up our own, most times this happened I just wagged school. We regularly only got two meals a day and I would sometimes have to stay home from school and babysit younger siblings if mum got called in to work. These changes will adversely affect many people including many children.
Also I could be wrong but I thought the FTB supplements were meant to correct underpayments? We always deliberately underestimated our income because we were so nervous of being in debt via overpayments.
These changes seem to have snuck unseen the radar, but for a family of three kids the ftb supplements changes mean losing over $2100 a year. No one expects handouts but this is a huge amount to lose, having received it automatically for years beforehand... and two parents earning a combined income of $80,000 aren't exactly on easy street
Its easier to slug parents than it is to get big companys to pay tax