Economic Support for Individuals During the First Wave of COVID-19 : The Australian Experience
Citation
Source Title
ISSN
Faculty
School
Collection
Abstract
The Australian response to the COVID pandemic was on two fronts: the public health response was to keep the virus out of Australia, using border closures and social distancing measures as the first line of defence; and the economic response was through fiscal measures to support businesses and individuals who were affected by the disruption of these measures. The measures to support individuals who lost income as a result of the economic disruption included income support; rent moratoria; and access to superannuation. Further fiscal stimulus measures were introduced in subsequent budgets. These policies provided essential support during the pandemic in 2020. The economy recovered faster than expected following that first wave, resulting in some unintended outcomes in the labour market, the housing market and superannuation. These are likely to widen income and wealth gaps in Australia. These economic supports had been withdrawn by the time of the outbreak of the Delta variant on the east coast of Australia in mid-2021. The replacement programs provide less support than their predecessors, and the economy is showing the effects, particularly on income insecure residents. As the economy stabilises, the Government must adopt policies that protect the vulnerable, not revert to austerity settings.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Burke, T.; Stone, J.; Glackin, S.; Scheurer, Jan (2014)Despite the plethora of rental research, a significant gap remains in understanding the relationship between rental housing and 'transport disadvantage'. This project analyses the changing spatial concentration of ...
-
Koczberski, Gina; Curry, George; Warku, J.; Kwam, C. (2006)This report presents the findings of a socio-economic study conducted in six coastal villages in Kimbe Bay, West New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea. From west to east around the Bay the study villages were Kulungi, ...
-
Rusmin, Rusmin; Astami, Emita; Hartadi, B. (2014)© Emerald Group Publishing Limited.Purpose - The purpose of this paper is twofold. First, it investigates whether high free-cash-flow companies with low-growth opportunities (surplus free cash flow (SFCF)) are associated ...