Oireachtas Joint and Select Committees

Wednesday, 18 May 2022

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Social Protection

Policy Issues for Carers: Family Carers Ireland

Mr. John Dunne:

I thank the Deputies and Senators for the opportunity to speak to them about our suggestions for a radical review of policy on income protection for family carers, in particular the carer’s allowance. Carer’s allowance was first introduced in 1990 and it has benefited from periodic improvements since then. We believe, however, that the fundamentals of the scheme, which have remained unchanged for 32 years, now fall well short of current best practice.

The State recently launched a pilot basic income scheme specific to the arts sector. This will provide a basic income of €325 per week for people over three years. By way of comparison, had the State decided to introduce an artist's allowance modelled on the carer's allowance, artists would be eligible to receive a means-tested maximum of €224 per week, with a requirement that they demonstrate they are working full-time at their artistic endeavours and a prohibition on them spending more than 18.5 hours on income-generating activities. The pilot scheme was presented to enable artists "to focus on artistic production/practice without having to enter into employment in other sectors to sustain themselves". This is quite similar to the intent of the carer's allowance scheme, which is to allow carers to focus on their caring, without having to enter into employment in order to sustain themselves. The different income levels that are set suggest that artists have higher levels of sustenance needs than family carers. The other point to note is that the scheme was introduced as a way of recognising "the value of time spent on creative practice" by artists. I wish to be clear that in no way are we begrudging artists the benefit of what is an innovative and enlightened approach to income support, but we invite a reappraisal of how we as a State recognise "the value of time spent" on family caring, to use that phrase from the artist's scheme.

The State has reached a critical juncture in its treatment of family carers. Even before Covid, it had been agreed that a broader discussion was needed on the role of family caring, including the rights and needs of family carers and the financial supports available. The report of the citizen’s assembly is resolute in this regard expressing a high level of ambition for change. It recommends the reform of carer’s allowance including: changes to the means test and individualisation; increasing the hours that carers can work or study; reimbursing the costs associated with care; increasing the carer's support grant; and providing a dedicated pension solution for carers. Of particular significance is the assembly’s recommendation to replace Article 41.2 of the Constitution to recognise the care provided by both men and women, while obliging the State to take reasonable measures to support carers.

I shall now address what it is that needs to change. The classification of the carer's allowance as a social assistance payment, and therefore comparable with jobseeker's allowance and supplementary welfare allowance, is problematic. The classification does not recognise the uniqueness of family carers within the social welfare system, and it is hampering efforts to make carer’s allowance more accessible to full-time carers who we believe should qualify. Consistent references to the carer’s allowance means test as being the most generous in the social welfare system, while correct, presuppose that it should be benchmarked against income supports for people of working age, which is not the correct categorisation or comparison.

We acknowledge and welcome the increase in the income and capital disregards for carer’s allowance announced in last year’s budget but the implementation of these increases has been problematic for a number of reasons. Mr. Douglas, Ms Budayova and Ms Ryan will explain these reasons in their personal statements shortly.

Family Carers Ireland believes that the carer’s allowance scheme is archaic, gender-biased, overly restrictive, and no longer fit for purpose. When the carer's allowance was introduced in 1990, it was conceived as an income support for people living with and caring for a relevant pensioner. It was not designed to meet the very different life circumstances and needs of lifetime carers who care for prolonged and lengthy periods and who need access to an integrated income support system that encourages rather than restricts their participation in work and education. Restricting the hours a carer can work or study is paternalistic and at odds with the Department's mission to promote active participation and inclusion. Imposing the 18.5-hour ceiling traps carers, forcing them to remain dependent on social welfare and unable to prepare for life after care. This is particularly anomalous with regard to education. The inclusion of travel to and from college, as well as course work and class contact hours even where they are performed by distance learning, means the vast majority of education courses exceed the 18.5-hour ceiling. Even more bizarrely, a family carer can spend more than 18.5 hours reading non-educational books or writing fiction but if her or she spends that time reading and writing course work it would affect his or her eligibility under the scheme.

Income support for family carers also reinforces the already entrenched gender stereotype of women as the primary caregiver. It does this in several ways. The absence of a pay-related benefit discourages the higher paid partner from leaving work to care. This is usually the male partner. Means testing carer’s allowance based on the household income rather than on the individual income of the family carer reinforces the male breadwinner model and forces carers, the majority women, to be financially reliant on their partner. As a result, the vast majority of recipients under the three care-related social protection schemes are women, ranging from 77% of claimants receiving carer's allowance to 83% of those on carer's benefit. While other payments such as jobseeker’s allowance, disability allowance and the foster carer’s allowance are exempt from tax, the taxation of carer’s allowance seems a fairly arbitrary penalty imposed on family carers.

Now is the time to reassess the value we place on unpaid care and to review how carers are recognised and supported financially by the State. We believe this review should lead to fundamental changes in carer’s allowance including: the reclassification of the scheme; the abolition of the means test; or the establishment of a participation income for carers, as recommended by the National Economic and Social Council in 2020. We believe that the requirement to satisfy strict medical eligibility criteria and the requirement that applicants provide full-time care should be sufficient to protect the carer’s allowance scheme from potential abuse.

We acknowledge that a fundamental review of income support for family carers would be a substantial and technical exercise that would require careful consideration and reflection. Our first call today is that such a process be initiated and a reasonable timeframe set for its completion. Our second call, having regard to the fact that we must continue to live with the current carer's allowance system for a few more years, is for a significant increase in the levels of carer's benefit and carer's allowance in this year’s budget.

Research by the Vincentian Partnership for Social Justice published in April shows that even before the cost of living crisis, income supports for family carers caring for a child with a profound intellectual disability were inadequate in supporting low-income households to meet the minimum essential standard of living. These households, which are representative of many caring situations, incur additional weekly costs of €244 per week compared to a similarly composed household with no disability or care needs. The research also shows that the disadvantage experienced by caring households does not end as income increases. Even caring households with higher income levels have significantly less disposable income to meet the need for contingencies such as car or house repairs, medical expenses, or unexpected bills. These families, who often rely on a single income due to their caring responsibilities, face a financial battle as they are ineligible for almost all carer supports, yet face the same crippling costs of caring without recognition or support from the State. It is untenable to think that families earning a gross household income of more than €65,000 are considered sufficiently well-off to meet these additional costs themselves, regardless of their mortgage repayments, loans, children's education expenses, and other outgoings.

The gross inadequacy of carer's allowance when compared with the Government’s own benchmark for artist sustainability is insulting and unjust. The maximum rate of carer's allowance of €224, which is just €3.50 more per week than it was in 2009, represents a loss of €25 per week in purchasing power when inflation is taken into account.

The introduction of a basic income for artists of €325 and the establishment of the pandemic unemployment payment, PUP, at €350 highlight the inadequacy of carer's allowance to provide a basic standard of living, even before the additional costs of caring are considered. The foster carer's allowance is not means-tested and is rightly set at a rate of €325 for the care of children under 12 and €352 for older children, with the payment exempted from social welfare means testing and tax-free. Furthermore, if the foster carer is caring for a child with additional needs - we must bear in mind that every family carer is doing so - the payment can increase to €549 or €576 per week, depending on the age of the child, whereas a parent forced to give up work to care for their own child with additional needs receives up to €352 less per week.

The Assisted Decision-Making (Capacity) Act, due to be commenced next month, is dependent on family carers assuming the role of a decision supporter in many cases. While professionals appointed by the decision support service to act as a decision-making representative, will be paid for their time, family carers acting in this same role will not. The argument is that many family members undertake unpaid roles such as executor of an estate and the State does not want to undermine such volunteerism. However, family carers receiving only €224 per week for a full working week are surely entitled to question why they should be expected to carry this extra burden in terms of time and responsibility with no financial acknowledgement. An appropriate increase in carer's benefit and allowance would avoid any such risk to volunteering within the wider population.

Despite the additional and often unavoidable costs faced by family carers, the Government's package of cost-saving supports did little to mitigate the cost-of-living increases for carers. Indeed, despite the fuel poverty many carers face, they are not eligible for the fuel allowance scheme. For all of these reasons, the Government must urgently address the inadequacy and unfairness of carer supports by increasing the rate of carer's allowance and benefit to €325 per week in budget 2023. I thank members for their time and attention this morning. My colleagues and I will be happy to answer their questions in due course.

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