Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted
19 minutes ago, KhunHeineken said:

You are simply deflecting. 

 

An older report, but still relevant. 

 

https://www.9news.com.au/national/dole-bludgers-worst-in-australia-revealed/cf24a1bc-b329-4982-a9ce-5c04ce23acf8

 

"According to the report nearly 50,000 people in Australia that are capable of working did not attend job interviews in the past year, but are still not being penalised."

 

The reports says 50,000, but according to you, very little fraud.  As said, the reason little fraud is found is because the recipient "qualified" but that doesn't mean they can not work.   

 

This woman got away with it for 21 years.  Had over $240,000AUD in cash in her home.  She even instructed others how to defraud the system.  Where's the checks and balances to be able to get away with it for so long, and for so much?   

 

 

You don't comprehend the difference between "fraudsters" and to use your word, "qualified" recipients.  You still don't see it's the ease of obtaining a welfare payment that is the issue. 

 

Here's an example that's closer to home.

 

Say an Aussie expat has been living in Thailand for many years.  He now reaches retirement age.  He goes back to Australia to stay for 2 years to re-establish residency.  He tells Centerlink what they want to hear, that is, his intention is to live in Australia.  After 2 years he achieves portability, and flies back to Thailand a day later.  He had no intention of remaining in Australia at all.  Now, he "qualified" for the welfare, but has he committed "fraud?" 

 

 

 

Over 5 million people receiving some form of government assistance from people with disabilities to aged pensioners

You quoted Thai example is not fraud if he gains portability, & has paid tax in Australia in the lead up, and qualifies for such under the rules.

You one outlier is from a clickbait media, not research.

Ch9 is hardly a reliable source of unbiased information

I am well aware of the  meaning of fraudster, this applied after someone is convicted in a court of law, not a court of personal bias

  I will rely on government and university sources for facts

  • Age Pension:
    2.6 million recipients, accounting for 52% of all income support recipients. 
     
  • Unemployment payments:
    Around 920,000 recipients, representing 16% of all income support recipients. 
     
  • Disability Support Pension:
    Around 769,300 recipients, also accounting for 16% of all income support recipients. 
     
  • Carer Payment:
    Around 300,000 recipients, representing 6.1% of all income support recipients. 
     
Additionally, around 1.3 million income units were receiving Commonwealth Rent Assistance (CRA) in June 2023, and approximately 418,400 households were in social housing programs. 

 

You are married to your point of view and unable to engage in research

Posted
2 minutes ago, RJRS1301 said:

You quoted Thai example is not fraud if he gains portability, & has paid tax in Australia in the lead up, and qualifies for such under the rules.

You've added your own criteria in there.  It's criteria that Centerlink does not require.  Eg. has paid tax. 

 

Say he's never worked a day in his life, and never paid any tax.  He qualifies, but does he deserve it?  Should he get it?  Should the taxpayer fund is retirement in Thailand? 

 

5 minutes ago, RJRS1301 said:

Ch9 is hardly a reliable source of unbiased information

This guy openly admits it.

 

CH9 or no CH9, hear the story from his own mouth. 

 

People work hard to give this deadsh*t money every fortnight, and YOU defend the system that allows it, simply because he "qualifies." 

 

 

 

8 minutes ago, RJRS1301 said:

Around 920,000 recipients, representing 16% of all income support recipients. 

How many of these are able bodied and can work????

Posted
51 minutes ago, KhunHeineken said:

You've added your own criteria in there.  It's criteria that Centerlink does not require.  Eg. has paid tax. 

 

Say he's never worked a day in his life, and never paid any tax.  He qualifies, but does he deserve it?  Should he get it?  Should the taxpayer fund is retirement in Thailand? 

 

This guy openly admits it.

 

CH9 or no CH9, hear the story from his own mouth. 

 

People work hard to give this deadsh*t money every fortnight, and YOU defend the system that allows it, simply because he "qualifies." 

 

 

 

How many of these are able bodied and can work????

I have no idea, you seem to be armchair expert, perhaps you should be working for Centrelink investigations, although requires a open mind, which appears to be somewhat lacking 

  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
1 hour ago, RJRS1301 said:

I have no idea, you seem to be armchair expert, perhaps you should be working for Centrelink investigations, although requires a open mind, which appears to be somewhat lacking 

If living in Oz for the length required most likely one has worked and paid tax

  • Initial Residence:
    You must have been a resident in Australia for at least 2 years before being granted the Age Pension. If you leave Australia within 2 years of receiving the pension, your eligibility might be lost. 
     
  • 24-Month Waiting Period:
    After you start receiving your Age Pension in Australia, there's a 24-month period before it becomes portable outside Australia. 
     
  • Australian Working Life Residence (AWLR):
    This refers to the number of years you lived in Australia between the age of 16 and your Age Pension age. 
     
    • 35 years or more AWLR: If you have 35 years or more of AWLR, your Age Pension will generally continue to be paid at the same rate, regardless of how long you stay overseas. 
       
    • Less than 35 years AWLR: If your AWLR is less than 35 years, your pension payment may be proportionalized (reduced) after 26 weeks outside Australia. 
       
  • International Social Security Agreements:
    Australia has agreements with several countries, which may allow you to claim your Australian pension while living in the agreement country. 
     
  • Temporary Absences:
    If your absence from Australia is temporary (e.g., for a holiday), you may still be able to continue receiving your pension payments for a limited time, as determined by the specific payment rules. 
     
  • Former Residents:
    If you were a former resident of Australia, there are specific rules that apply to your eligibility for the Age Pension, including the 24-month waiting period. 
Posted
1 hour ago, RJRS1301 said:

If living in Oz for the length required most likely one has worked and paid tax

  • Initial Residence:
    You must have been a resident in Australia for at least 2 years before being granted the Age Pension. If you leave Australia within 2 years of receiving the pension, your eligibility might be lost. 
     
  • 24-Month Waiting Period:
    After you start receiving your Age Pension in Australia, there's a 24-month period before it becomes portable outside Australia. 
     
  • Australian Working Life Residence (AWLR):
    This refers to the number of years you lived in Australia between the age of 16 and your Age Pension age. 
     
    • 35 years or more AWLR: If you have 35 years or more of AWLR, your Age Pension will generally continue to be paid at the same rate, regardless of how long you stay overseas. 
       
    • Less than 35 years AWLR: If your AWLR is less than 35 years, your pension payment may be proportionalized (reduced) after 26 weeks outside Australia. 
       
  • International Social Security Agreements:
    Australia has agreements with several countries, which may allow you to claim your Australian pension while living in the agreement country. 
     
  • Temporary Absences:
    If your absence from Australia is temporary (e.g., for a holiday), you may still be able to continue receiving your pension payments for a limited time, as determined by the specific payment rules. 
     
  • Former Residents:
    If you were a former resident of Australia, there are specific rules that apply to your eligibility for the Age Pension, including the 24-month waiting period. 

Thanks for all the important points above. Can I please suggest a small correction.

 

Copied from above:

 

      "24-Month Waiting Period:
       After you start receiving your Age Pension in Australia, there's a 24-month period           before it becomes portable outside Australia".  This is not correct.
 
The correct information:  "The 24 months period starts from the day the person arrived back in Australia (taken from online immigration / passport in/out records). (This information can be found on the Centrelink website).
 
Meaning that the 24 months DOESN'T start from the day the person lodged their application for the the OAP.
 
And meaning that the 24 months DOESN'T doesn't start from the day the OAP was approved.
 
 
 

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.




×
×
  • Create New...