The Canberra Times
Immediately and forcefully, in the first sentence, we are given a demonstration of the problematic way Australia both wants to encourage women's workforce participation, but then misleadingly distorts the narrative to genderise the barriers faced by families.
This very first sentence compares the "effective'' marginal tax rate of women with children in childcare (a calculation that includes the loss of government childcare subsidies as income rises or reaches a threshold) to that of 'men'. Do men not have children?
(For context, child care fees in Australia are subsidised by the federal government, payable up to a certain amount of household income.)
But why do people "gender" Australia's gender-neutral child care fee policy? "Women" don't face EMTR of 60%. Child care fee subsidies are not based on personal income but household income. Why do people, and the media, base the calculation solely on a woman's income, including in dual-parent and dual-income households? Do the fathers of these children also not bear half the responsibility for caring for their own children? Do these cohabiting couples with children not combine their finances in the running of their household? Can every heterosexual co-habiting couple with pre-school age children in Australia really expect that child care (and therefore child care fees) are somehow the sole responsibility of the mother?
And yet it's no wonder the media distorts this way, because everybody I know with children also thinks of it this way. Because Australia's welfare system is highly targeted, it is often the case that once a household's income exceeds a certain threshold, it's possible for a family to be worse off financially because of the loss of child care subsidies. But it's always women who decide to reduce the number of days or hours they work to maximise the government benefit, as if the fathers in the household reducing their hours was out of the question.
Australia's targeted welfare system can also perversely inflame entitlement complexes. In a different story talking about the changes to Australia's child care subsidy, there was an interview with a woman who was complaining that she (that is, her household) would get no subsidy under the new system (whereas even quite high-income households got a subsidy under the system that was replaced), and therefore her children would miss out on the positive influence of early social interaction of children. It did not appear to occur to her that perhaps her husband's money (she did not work and therefore failed the 'work' test necessary to get the subsidy) could be used to pay for child care if she thought it was that important.
How can raising children be be more evenly shared when public policy encourages it or is neutral about it, but wider society works from a seemingly unshakeable base of ''it''s all a woman's responsibility"? I've spoken to people about this and they see my point, but it's met with a shrug of the shoulders, as if it didn't really apply to their own thinking or they just don't think it's important.
A woman with children in childcare will face an effective marginal tax rate of 59.4 per cent under Labor in 2024, compared to 56 per cent under the Coalition. The average man faces a 33.2 per cent tax rate under Labor and 28.8 per cent under the Coalition.
Immediately and forcefully, in the first sentence, we are given a demonstration of the problematic way Australia both wants to encourage women's workforce participation, but then misleadingly distorts the narrative to genderise the barriers faced by families.
This very first sentence compares the "effective'' marginal tax rate of women with children in childcare (a calculation that includes the loss of government childcare subsidies as income rises or reaches a threshold) to that of 'men'. Do men not have children?
(For context, child care fees in Australia are subsidised by the federal government, payable up to a certain amount of household income.)
But why do people "gender" Australia's gender-neutral child care fee policy? "Women" don't face EMTR of 60%. Child care fee subsidies are not based on personal income but household income. Why do people, and the media, base the calculation solely on a woman's income, including in dual-parent and dual-income households? Do the fathers of these children also not bear half the responsibility for caring for their own children? Do these cohabiting couples with children not combine their finances in the running of their household? Can every heterosexual co-habiting couple with pre-school age children in Australia really expect that child care (and therefore child care fees) are somehow the sole responsibility of the mother?
And yet it's no wonder the media distorts this way, because everybody I know with children also thinks of it this way. Because Australia's welfare system is highly targeted, it is often the case that once a household's income exceeds a certain threshold, it's possible for a family to be worse off financially because of the loss of child care subsidies. But it's always women who decide to reduce the number of days or hours they work to maximise the government benefit, as if the fathers in the household reducing their hours was out of the question.
Australia's targeted welfare system can also perversely inflame entitlement complexes. In a different story talking about the changes to Australia's child care subsidy, there was an interview with a woman who was complaining that she (that is, her household) would get no subsidy under the new system (whereas even quite high-income households got a subsidy under the system that was replaced), and therefore her children would miss out on the positive influence of early social interaction of children. It did not appear to occur to her that perhaps her husband's money (she did not work and therefore failed the 'work' test necessary to get the subsidy) could be used to pay for child care if she thought it was that important.
How can raising children be be more evenly shared when public policy encourages it or is neutral about it, but wider society works from a seemingly unshakeable base of ''it''s all a woman's responsibility"? I've spoken to people about this and they see my point, but it's met with a shrug of the shoulders, as if it didn't really apply to their own thinking or they just don't think it's important.