e Money
Tuesday, May 24, 2022
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
    • Home – Layout 1
    • Home – Layout 2
    • Home – Layout 3
  • Banking
  • Investing
  • Insurance
  • Retirement
  • Taxes
e Money
No Result
View All Result
Building Burdens into the Transfer System: A Closer Look at the Cashless Debit Card

Building Burdens into the Transfer System: A Closer Look at the Cashless Debit Card

admin by admin
December 11, 2021
in Retirement
0 0
0
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

When designing social security policies and programs which deliver government payments to individual claimants, governments have a choice as to whether they make eligibility for payments more or less burdensome. In their work on Administrative Burden: Policymaking by Other Means, Pamela Herd and Donald Moynihan explain that processes put in place to access government resources are often burdensome, with ‘learning costs’, ‘compliance costs’, and ‘psychological costs’ for claimants. These costs can weigh heavily on those needing access to resources. For people experiencing socioeconomic challenges the burdens are often particularly heavy. In the context of the welfare state, such costs or burdens play a key role in the accessibility of social security, and also have a significant impact on the dignity and autonomy of claimants.

This blog examines these issues in the context of the Cashless Debit Card (CDC), drawing upon my recent article in the Australian Journal of Public Administration. Australia has been experimenting with cashless welfare cards for many years, commencing with the BasicsCard as part of the 2007 Northern Territory Emergency Response. Then following with the CDC, which was implemented in 2016.

The policy rhetoric underpinning these programs is that social security recipients need external constraints imposed on them to prevent them from engaging in irresponsible purchasing patterns regarding a range of goods: alcohol, tobacco, gambling products, and pornography in terms of the BasicsCard, and alcohol, gambling products, and some gift cards in terms of the CDC. Pushing people from welfare into work has also featured prominently in dominant policy discourse.

My research shows that while cashless welfare card programs are publicised by governments as effective support mechanisms for people in need of social security, both cards have led to significant problems for cardholders in terms of managing their finances, purchasing what they need when they need it, and shame.

Burdens in securing essentials and managing social security income

People receiving social security payments already face the challenge of paying for essentials on low incomes. However, administrative burdens imposed through the CDC can add to their troubles. CDC holders in the original sites where the card was implemented generally have 80 per cent of their fortnightly payments restricted to the card, unless they have been able to obtain a reduction in their restricted payment percentage through an application to a community panel. CDC holders in the Northern Territory have 50 per cent of their income restricted to the CDC.

Numerous CDC holders have reported difficulties in navigating the burdens imposed by the program when they need to spend their social security income. The types of difficulties people on the CDC can experience when trying to spend their social security payment include:

  • technology failure due to power outages;
  • technology failure due to the financial services provider payment system;
  • payment delays for bills due to the financial services provider processes and subsequent fees incurred due to these late payments;
  • merchants and service providers refusing to accept the card;
  • cardholder error entering their CDC personal identification number; and
  • insufficient funds in the cardholder’s account to make the purchase.

The issue of insufficient funds can be related to difficulties in accessing their CDC balance, which requires consistent access to expensive non-government subsidised technology (for example, mobile phones, computers, data packages for internet connection).

The CDC imposes technology burdens on program participants – these are ‘compliance costs’ social security recipients on the CDC are expected to carry in exchange for their payment. However, it is important to reflect on the impact of de-facto technology tests built into the digitalisation of the welfare state, as these can have an exclusionary impact on people experiencing poverty.

There are also significant CDC ‘learning costs’. These include:

  • learning the CDC terms and conditions;
  • checking to see whether a particular merchant or service provider accepts the CDC (there are plenty that do not who are not selling alcohol, drugs or gambling products);
  • if the merchant or service provider does accept the CDC, checking to see their system is not down before trying to make purchases;
  • for those unfamiliar with internet banking, learning how to log on to the internet and manage bill payment online.

These learning costs can weigh heavily on social security recipients who also have time burdens imposed through other welfare conditionality programs.

The Commonwealth Government emphasises that the CDC ‘can be used online and at markets or anywhere else which offers purchases using an EFTPOS machine.’ However, many people have found the CDC more restrictive – with constraints extending beyond items that were meant to be prohibited expenditure categories. Difficulties purchasing groceries, car insurance, vehicles, second hand goods, and health needs have been reported since the commencement of the program.

Research indicates that CDC holders have endured hundreds of thousands of failed transactions. Transaction failures represent the loss of capacity of CDC holders to access consumer goods and services at the time when these are needed.

Government commissioned research undertaken in Ceduna, the East Kimberley and the Goldfields discovered that 50 per cent of cardholders found that it was harder to manage their money once they had been put on the CDC, and 52 per cent found it harder to save money once they were put on the CDC. These are concerning CDC ‘compliance costs’ for cardholders.

Time and psychological burdens of cashless welfare cards

In terms of time burdens, the CDC involves time lost trying to sort out technology failures, transaction failures, and repeated attempts to pay for the goods or services. Those on the CDC who encounter delays in their bill payments due to technology issues and financial services provider processes can also experience the burden of a reduced credit rating.

In terms of ‘psychological costs’, government commissioned research reveals that CDC holders experienced ‘a large decline in the level of autonomy and control’ and the majority reported ‘feelings of discrimination, embarrassment, shame and unfairness as a result of being on the Card’. In addition, the CDC imposes the psychological cost of mandatory visibility as to socioeconomic status when people are engaging in consumer activity.

The heavy burdens embodied in the CDC expenditure process are represented in Figure 1, where people on the program can experience one or a combination of these burdens at any given time.

Figure 1: A Burdensome CDC Expenditure Process

The long-term effects of such burdensome processes across the compulsory cohort of cardholders are yet to be seen, however the short-term effects include adverse impacts on health and wellbeing.

Conclusion

The CDC imposes significant burdens – ‘learning costs’, ‘compliance costs’, and ‘psychological costs’ – on people receiving social security payments. These costs are a consequence of an overall welfare conditionality project that builds disincentives to claim government income support into the structure of the social security system. Cardholders experience heavy compliance and administrative burdens in securing essentials and managing their social security income using the CDC. Evidence suggests that numerous people in need of social security who have been forced on to the CDC would benefit from a reduction in burdensome processes. This would be facilitated by designing systems that are autonomy enhancing, respectful of the human dignity of claimants, and fairly easy to navigate.

Related Posts

Use of a Virtual Supermarket to Study the Effectiveness of Health-Related Food Taxes and Subsidies
Retirement

Use of a Virtual Supermarket to Study the Effectiveness of Health-Related Food Taxes and Subsidies

May 23, 2022
Harnessing Super for Dream Homes With Not So Dreamy Super Balances
Retirement

Harnessing Super for Dream Homes With Not So Dreamy Super Balances

May 20, 2022
Super for Housing or the Government as a Co-owner: How Liberal and Labor Home-Buyer Schemes Compare
Retirement

Super for Housing or the Government as a Co-owner: How Liberal and Labor Home-Buyer Schemes Compare

May 19, 2022
If Governments Were Really Concerned About Tax and the Cost of Living They Would Cut the Cost of Childcare
Retirement

If Governments Were Really Concerned About Tax and the Cost of Living They Would Cut the Cost of Childcare

May 16, 2022
[Budget Forum 2022] Why Not Repeal the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax and Levy a Royalty for Offshore Gas?
Retirement

[Budget Forum 2022] Why Not Repeal the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax and Levy a Royalty for Offshore Gas?

May 13, 2022
Does Corporate Tax Avoidance Enhance Managerial Empire Building?
Retirement

Does Corporate Tax Avoidance Enhance Managerial Empire Building?

May 3, 2022
Next Post
The Unequal Burden of Australian Pension Reform

The Unequal Burden of Australian Pension Reform

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Snap slides as it warns EBITDA, revenues to fall below guidance. – Investment Watch May 24, 2022
  • Listen: Banks should forget crypto payments, identify use cases May 24, 2022
  • It Was the “Strong” Economy That Was Transitory May 24, 2022
  • Plaid adds ID verification tool May 24, 2022
  • a Quick Rundown of our Rundown Economy – Investment Watch May 24, 2022

Categories

  • Banking (497)
  • Insurance (27)
  • Investing (2,091)
  • Retirement (57)
  • Taxes (64)
  • Uncategorized (1)
e Money

We bring you the best Premium WordPress Themes that perfect for news, magazine, personal blog, etc. Check our landing page for details.

Categories

  • Banking
  • Insurance
  • Investing
  • Retirement
  • Taxes
  • Uncategorized

Follow us on social media

Recent News

  • Snap slides as it warns EBITDA, revenues to fall below guidance. – Investment Watch
  • Listen: Banks should forget crypto payments, identify use cases
  • It Was the “Strong” Economy That Was Transitory

Copyright © 2021 - eMoney.press - DESIGNED AND DEVELOPED BY TEAM WORDPRESS BLOGX

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Home 2
  • Home 3
  • Sample Page

Copyright © 2021 - eMoney.press - DESIGNED AND DEVELOPED BY TEAM WORDPRESS BLOGX

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In