Australia’s welfare 2009
The full report: Australia’s welfare 2009
Key points
This section presents selected findings from the report. Each chapter from 2
to 7 also begins with its own list of key points. Please refer to the index for
more detail on these topics.
Children, youth and families
- Over half a million Australian children (15%) lived in jobless families in
2006.
- Almost three-in-four (72%) children aged 3–6 years not in school usually
attended preschool or a preschool program in long day care in 2008. Attendance
was lower in families where parents were not employed.
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and young people continue to be
disadvantaged across a number of areas—less likely to attend preschool and
school, meet minimum standards for literacy and numeracy and to continue their
schooling to Year 12, are over-represented in the child protection system, and
are more likely to be under juvenile justice supervision.
Ageing and aged care
- The planning of the allocation of places in Australian Government programs for
residential and community care is under review, with the programs continuing to
grow and reflect the structural changes in the ageing population.
- Home and Community Care (HACC) continues to reach the largest number of older
clients in community care.
- Deeper understanding of how clients interact with the programs and services in
the aged care system is being aided by data linkage between programs. The study
of pathways in aged care (PIAC study) has led to a linked dataset which enables
a study into patterns and dynamics in aged care service use.
Disability and disability services
- The number of people with disability doubled between 1981 and 2003, to reach
an estimated 3.9 million Australians.
- The rate of growth in the number of people with profound or severe core
activity limitation, that is, people who need help with core daily activities,
was even higher (173% increase). Estimated to be around 1.5 million Australians
by 2010, the number of people with this high level of disability is projected to
increase to almost 2.3 million by 2030—roughly equivalent to the entire
population of Western Australia in 2009.
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are more than twice as likely as
non-Indigenous Australians to need help with core daily activities because of
disability.
- Disability shows an uneven geographic distribution, not always linked to
remoteness. Census data on capital cities show that higher levels of disability
tend to be more prevalent in areas of relative economic disadvantage.
Carers and informal care
- Most informal carers are women, aged between 25 and 54 years, and live with
the person for whom they care. They are the main source of assistance for most
people with disability and other long-term conditions, and the aged.
- Respite care is the major service type that specifically supports carers, yet
few carers report that they have used respite services. Many carers who had used
respite care previously (but not recently) said that they did not need it, they
preferred not to use it or that their care recipient did not want it. For some
carers this may indicate a lack of appropriate respite services.
- Many carers do not find the caring role satisfying, and many experience lower
health and wellbeing than non-carers as well as considerable social
disadvantage. Many carers also experience financial disadvantage, which for some
(and particularly female carers) is related to their reduced capacity to
participate in paid work as a result of their caring responsibilities.
- Support services in the future will have to meet increased demand but may also
need to adopt new approaches to service delivery (including the need to close
service gaps) and support shared-care responsibilities. This includes care that
is shared more widely within informal care networks, but also a stronger
shared-care approach between informal carers and formal support services.
Housing and housing assistance
- Current demand for affordable housing exceeds supply and the continued decline
in affordability in the private rental market may further increase the demand
for social housing.
- The largest ever single investment in social housing, and a new national
housing agreement, will bring about significant changes in the supply and
delivery of housing assistance to low-income households.
Homelessness
- Although homelessness is widely regarded as a metropolitan issue and inner
city areas do have high rates of homelessness, there are also high rates of
homelessness in regional and remote areas.
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are over-represented in the
homeless population, particularly in the Supported Accommodation Assistance
Program (SAAP). On Census night 2006, Indigenous peoples were around 2% of
Australians, but were 9% of homeless people. In 2007–08, 18% of SAAP clients and
26% of accompanying children were Indigenous.
- Family homelessness is an issue of growing concern. Of homeless people in
Australia on Census night 2006, over a quarter (26%) were members of homeless
families with children (up 17% from 2001). Families with children received over
half (51%) of the total periods of support provided by SAAP in 2007–08 (up 45%
from 2001–02).