Media

Australia politics live: Labor spruiks plan for automatic $3,000 compensation payment to scam victims | Australia news

Australia politics live: Labor spruiks plan for automatic $3,000 compensation payment to scam victims | Australia news

Rishworth defends jobseeker work program

Catie McLeod

The employment minister, Amanda Rishworth, has said she is concerned there is “varying quality” among the providers meant to help welfare recipients find work but defended keeping private companies in the system.

Rishworth was interviewed on the ABC’s 7.30 program last night, after announcing at the National Press Club in Canberra that Labor would amend the unemployment system for jobseeker recipients.

The exact details of the new system were not announced yesterday but it is set to be separated into three streams depending on a jobseeker’s skill level and work readiness.

Asked by 7.30 if she accepted some of the responsibility for the “failures in the current system” were due to for-profit job providers who “ignore the more difficult cases”, Rishworth said:

double quotation markI would say that I am concerned that there is varying quality in the system. So I am focused on how we lift quality.

Stream one really is about the public service delivery. Stream two is more like the services we understand today.

Stream three, I imagine, will be different types of providers – they will have deep connection with community and be able to do this specialised, intensive work.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Cook warns CGT carve out shouldn’t disincentivise mining investment

WA premier, Roger Cook, has warned the government that its changes to the capital gains tax discount should not disincentivise investment in the mining sector.

On Wednesday, the Labor premier said that investors – locally and abroad – had already raised concerns about the changes, and told him “that could potentially put a disincentive in place for foreign investors”.

Cook said:

double quotation markIt’s important that as the government continues to consult and refine the tax laws, which back up their announcements in relation to the budget, that they talk to industry about … the potential impacts of those announcements, and ensure that the laws ultimately don’t produce outcomes that they didn’t intend.

We want to make sure that it [the tax changes] doesn’t disincentivise both international investment in our major projects but also exploration.

Share

Leave a Reply

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