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Should Carers allowance be means tested, why is it means tested if all parties agree it shouldn't

  • 20-11-2024 02:49PM
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,600 ✭✭✭


    Listening to newstalk here and all the politicians up for election are talking about carers allowance. Everyone of them including those in the current government agree it should not be means tested as the individual doing the caring is saving the state a hell of a lot of money. One stat is that people are saving the government 20 billion a year by people caring for people.

    So a few questions have to asked.

    So should the means test be taken away to allow people who are caring to join the work force or for a couple who have one partner giving up work to care why should they not get carers based on their partners income, after all they are giving up their livelihood to do the caring? (if the state had to step in it would cost). Also why has this not been implemented already if the current government agree it should be taken away?

    Post edited by Necro on


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,719 ✭✭✭BrianD3


    There are various estimates on what this would cost.

    Parliamentary Budget office - 397 million p.a.

    Family Carers Ireland - 389 million p.a

    Response by Minister Humphreys to a Parliamentary Question - 1.2 billion p.a.

    https://familycarers.ie/media/3116/estimating-the-cost-of-abolishing-the-carer-s-allowance-means-test.pdf

    Apart from the cost, the government know that many people will give up their jobs/reduce their hours/impoverish themselves/spend their savings to look after loved ones regardless of whether they get carer's allowance or not - so why bother abolishing the means test.

    If the means test were to be abolished, perhaps more people could afford to become carers instead of placing their relatives in nursing homes. Most nursing home are for profit entities funded by the state and residents under the Fair Deal scheme. Would profits be hit if more people were cared for by relatives at home? Can't have that.

    Personally, I gave up my job to become a full time carer. Working, even a few hours a week, is completely out of the question. I don't get CA as I fail the means test due to savings. Silly me, saving my money while I was working instead of splurging on rubbish. I get the non means tested carer's support grant, a miserable 1850 euro per year. I estimate that the care I am providing would cost at least 150,000 p.a. if I or the state was paying for it (as with nursing home care, homecare is mostly an outsourced, for profit business) And based on my experience of the sh*tshow that is homecare, the service that would be provided for that 150k would be rubbish.



  • Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 56,261 Mod ✭✭✭✭Necro


    Mod: Moved to State Benefits which is more appropriate



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,384 ✭✭✭✭noodler


    The very high costs in the media 800m rising to 2bn if new previously unknown cohorts start claiming are one obvious reason. It would be half the social welfare package for the next 5 years.

    In addition, is it a good idea? Should welfare not be a safety net rather than something which attempts to "reimburse" for hours cared when you already earn a decent salary?

    Finally, we use means testing generally as a means to ensure we can target scare resources at those who need them most. It's a well established tool. Every euro the sw system gives to someone that does.not.require it is a euro that could be better spent elsewhere.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,600 ✭✭✭fliball123


    What about people who have paid tax all their lives and find themselves in position of having to care for someone as the previous poster quite rightly pointed out is it right to punish someone who has been prudent with their savings and is it not a case of this person simply getting back the tax they and their partner have paid in? The other side is the person caring could work again meaning more taxation coming in on the other side. Why should people not get back out of the system what they have paid in when it is flittered away on others and on ridiculous other spend like bike sheds, curtain, toilets and other crazy high costing outlay? I would rather see people caring for someone being given this cash and cut to shreds the l'oriel budget of the OPW. You say welfare should be a safety net so your telling me that someone who has to give up their career/job and care does not fall into that bracket regardless of what their partner is earning?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,384 ✭✭✭✭noodler


    Our social welfare system by and large isn't there to repay people what they pay in.

    Most of it is social assistance rather than based on your contributions.

    I don't understand how someone who is currently not working (and caring) wouldn't pass the means test as it is.

    I hear what you are saying about a 300k bike shed and the money will be wasted on other things but that is an argument that could be made.for absolutely any expenditure increase and doesn't feel comparable to something with a potential cost of 1-2bn.

    What spending that money on a proper childcare scheme? We can't have everything, even when individual policy proposals have merit in isolation - we have to make choices.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,600 ✭✭✭fliball123


    No its to support people and people who have paid in who through no fault of their own find themselves having to leave a job to care should be supported.

    To answer your question if a couple were working and one of them had to stop then they could well be over the limit with the partners wage. I agree with what your saying about the bike shed argument but shouldn't people who have been paying in tax for a period of time be prioritized.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,719 ✭✭✭BrianD3


    Most discussion on the means test seems to focus on couples where one of them is a carer and is denied CA because their partner's income puts the couple over the means threshold. That is still not as bad as the situation of a single person with significant savings e.g. me. My caring duties mean I cannot work, even doing a few hours is out of the question. So the 18.5 hours that I'd be permitted to be employed for is useless.

    I don't have a partner so no household income from them

    The income limit for CA for a single person at the moment is 450 euro per week rising to 625 euro per week next year. Double those figures for a couple.

    For capital, the means from it is assessed as follows:
    First €50,000 Nil
    Next €10,000 €1 per €1,000
    Next €10,000 €2 per €1,000
    Balance (any capital over €70,000) €4 per €1,000

    In other words, if a single person has 220k in savings, their means from that is assessed as 630 euro per week which is over even the 2025 limit for CA.

    Try generating 630 euro per week return from a 220k investment and see how you get on - clearly the DSP expects a person in this situation to spend their capital.

    I wouldn't even mind the means test for CA if this state provided good care in the community to the people that need it. It doesn't, public services are in a heap.

    Public health nursing, occupational therapy, physiotherapy, speech and language therapy, GPs, dentistry - shambles.


    Homecare - an unregulated shambles with widespread abuse and probable fraud happening due to the HSE outsourcing services to private providers and then being too incompetent/under-resourced to manage the contracts.


    Nursing homes - waiting lists, greed, residents charged for services not delivered, sexual and financial abuse, residents left hungry, constant non compliances with regulations. Recent example, Bushfield Care Centre in Oranmore that among other problems had no hot water to wash residents because they got their gas cutoff due to non payment of utility bills.

    Seeing as nobody apparently gives a fcuk about elderly and vulnerable people, pay those people who do care i.e. family members who have given up their jobs or severely reduced their hours to provide care that the state is incapable of providing.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 767 ✭✭✭Dan Steely


    Is the removal of the Carer's Allowance means test a possibility or was it just pre-election vote talk?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,223 ✭✭✭✭zell12


    It was just promises by various parties.



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