Leah, a 48-year-old mum of five, receives $320 in Newstart allowance every fortnight.
A bond loan and an advanced payment plan she took out to pay for car registration has already been automatically deducted from her payments. Once she pays for rent, petrol, her electricity and phone bill, car and funeral insurance, Leah is often left with nothing.
“We spend zero dollars on food,” she tells Mamamia. “I’d rely on food services, like Vinnies or the church.”
“The only reason I have money for food now is that my son and his fiance have moved back and they pay board,” she adds.
Listen to Leah speak more about her experience on Newstart on Mamamia’s The Quicky. Post continues.
Leah is one of more than 700,000 Australians who rely on the Newstart allowance to survive.
For a single person without kids on Newstart, they’ll receive a maximum of $555.70 a fortnight. That’s $277.85 a week, just shy of $40 a day.
It’s a number that hasn’t risen in real terms since the mid-1990s, back when petrol was just over 66c/L and rent was on average under $200.
In 2019, for people like Leah who survive on Newstart, they have learnt to go without to make ends meet.
“You eat once a day so your children can have three meals a day,” Leah, whose two youngest children live at home with her and her husband, tells Mamamia‘s daily news podcast, The Quicky.
“You don’t go out for dinners, you don’t go out to the movies. My husband and I go out once a year for our anniversary. And half the time other people pay that for us.”