Caleb Bond on the TV experiment that totally changed his opinion of welfare
Columnist Caleb Bond is well-known for his conservative views - but one opinion changed drastically after he took part in a bold TV experiment.
News.com.au
November 17, 2021
Welfare recipients have long argued that politicians ought to live like them for a while to see how they like it.
Unlike most politicians, I can now say I’ve done it.
Granted – nine days is a lot shorter than most people endure on welfare and I was followed by television cameras. But it is, nevertheless, able to provide a stark insight many others will not have seen or experienced.
When I agreed to film the SBS series Could You Survive On The Breadline?, I obviously came with a set of preconceived notions. Dare I suggest that’s half the reason they invited me on.
My dislike of the welfare state is well publicised – both in terms of personal and corporate welfare.
As the beneficiary of what I’d call a “normal” working class upbringing, my experiences of welfare were limited to family tax benefits.
Caleb Bond on Could You Survive On The Breadline?
So as someone who went in with fresh eyes, let me say, categorically, that the state of welfare and public housing in this country is worse than an outsider could have imagined.
As an example, I spent a night with a man by the name of Pierre, who lives in a housing commission flat in Surry Hills in Sydney.
The housing commission refused to provide enough bins for the building, or empty them often enough, so when the bins were full people would put their rubbish outside.
That, of course, attracted rats. The place was swarming with them.
When one of these rats died underneath Pierre’s floorboards, the housing commission didn’t come out to pull up a floorboard or two to remove it.
They put him up in a hotel for a week so the rat could decompose and stop smelling.
He previously battled mould in his bathroom while the housing commission refused to install a fan.
The cost of putting him in a hotel could have covered that fan and then some.
But, sadly, the system does not appear terribly concerned with actually helping people in need out of the holes in which they find themselves.
And if that’s not the objective, you are simply consigning people to lifelong misery.
I believe in personal responsibility and the ability of the individual, but you have to give them a leg up.
Pierre and others who do not have the capacity to work full-time, or who cannot get full-time employment, told me that they would like to be able to do a little bit of work to supplement their welfare incomes.
But if they did that, they risked losing their entire welfare benefit – which would leave them in an even worse position.
Caleb Bond says he was ‘extremely moved’ during his time filming.
For them, seeking work was likely to see them worse off. So again, the system provides no springboard for people to improve their lot in life.
I would not previously have advocated for raising the rate of JobSeeker. And I still don’t believe that raising the rate, in and of itself, is a silver bullet to improve the lives of those on welfare.
But it is one potential cog in a system that ought to be completely rebuilt.
I met people who, through shrewd financial management, did not struggle to get by. I met others who, for various reasons, struggled immensely.
Because people are different. And in this case, they are dealing with a one-size-fits-all system.
You give $40 to someone in Adelaide and they will likely be able to make it go further than someone in Sydney. But there’s no acknowledgment of these disparities and it is holding people back – in some cases for the entirety of their lives.
Extra money would improve some people’s lives. Physical support would help others. But as it stands, there is no room for any of this.
It’s not hard to see why some people would feel so beaten that they cannot see a way out.
As a taxpayer, the government compulsorily takes a significant portion of my income to spend on whatever it sees fit. And it spends on welfare to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars each year.
We, as a country, should expect that money to be spent in the best way possible to provide for those less fortunate.
That is not happening. It fails those who rely on welfare to survive. And it fails us as a country.
I was extremely moved during my time filming. The people I met – and the people you will watch – are largely just trying their best. But, to this nation’s great shame, they are continually failed by the system.
Watch Caleb Bond in Could You Survive On The Breadline? tonight, Wednesday, November 17 at 8.30pm on SBS and airing over three weeks.