The fate of lone parents in the forthcoming budget was a “real worry”
for the Society of St Vincent de Paul, its head of social justice and
policy has warned.
John Mark McCafferty, speaking at its
pre-budget event today, said Government talk about protecting the
vulnerable was “just rhetoric”.
The reality was Government did
have choices about where to cut in the forthcoming budget and despite
all its claims about protecting the most vulnerable, it was the most
vulnerable who had so far been most harshly targeted, he said, adding
the cuts had targeted sectors.
“It’s easy to play one off against
the other. Lone parents were the big targets in 2012, and it is a real
worry for us that they may feel the cuts most harshly again, with
further erosion of lone-parents supports.”
At the event the
organisation also published a booklet, The Human Face of Austerity as
witnessed by the SVP, which outlines 13 case studies met by its
volunteers over the past year.
They include a family of two adults
and three children aged 17, 12 and 11. They live in the country, and
the father has lost his job.
“The family has a mortgage but has
negotiated a break with the bank reducing payments from €1500 a month to
€600. At home the mother is moving tinned food from the cupboard to the
fridge to make it look full in front of the children. She buys food
going out of date as its cheaper. Her daily worry is what the family
will eat today,” according to the booklet.
Another case is Sharon,
a lone mother of three children on social welfare of €256 per week.
She
also receives rent supplement for the private rented flat they live in.
She was receiving €50 a week maintenance but her ex-partner lost his
job, and the payments have stopped.
“Sharon owes €700 for
electricity and the school, €90 for the book rental scheme. The family
has now received a disconnection notice from their electricity
supplier.”
Economist Dr Micheál Collins, from the Nevin Economic
Research Institute said the numbers of households on low-incomes was far
greater than generally perceived by policy-makers and by those on
higher incomes.
“Many, many people are living on incomes below was
the minimum necessary to meet basic needs. There is room in this budget
for greater tax increases, from income and other sources. Further
public service cuts will hit the poorest hardest. The Government has choices,” he said.
Although
it had said the adjustment of €3.5 billion in budget 2013 would be
achieved through one-third tax increases and two-thirds spending cuts,
Mr Collins said under a more equitable breakdown this would be reversed.
In his opinion the breakdown should be 85 per cent tax increases and 15
per cent spending cuts, he said.
Geoff Meagher, national
president of the society, asked could it be imaginable that those whose
struggles and despair were outlined in the booklet would take more cuts.
“Government
must set out a road map so that people are protected and can retain
some hope for the future. The people we meet talk about their need to
have hope. The burden that has been placed upon them is unfair.”