• Advertise
  • About us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact us
Sunday, December 7, 2025
Australian Times News
  • News
    • Weather
    • Sport
    • Technology
    • Business & Finance
      • Currency Zone
    • Lotto Results
      • The Lott
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Horoscopes
    • Health & Wellness
    • Recipes
  • Travel
  • Expat Life
  • Move to Australia
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Weather
    • Sport
    • Technology
    • Business & Finance
      • Currency Zone
    • Lotto Results
      • The Lott
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Horoscopes
    • Health & Wellness
    • Recipes
  • Travel
  • Expat Life
  • Move to Australia
No Result
View All Result
Australian Times News
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Already badly off, single parents went dramatically backwards during COVID. They are raising our future adults

Single parents with dependent children — eight out of ten of them women — were far more likely than others to lose work at the height of the pandemic and are far more likely to still be out of work now.

The Conversation by The Conversation
30-03-2021 01:55
in News
Photo by Michael Dziedzic on Unsplash

Photo by Michael Dziedzic on Unsplash

Tom Crowley, Grattan Institute; Danielle Wood, Grattan Institute, and Esther Suckling, Grattan Institute

Single parents with dependent children — eight out of ten of them women — were far more likely than others to lose work at the height of the pandemic and are far more likely to still be out of work now.

Even before COVID, many were in financial distress.

Single parents’ paid hours fell more than 30% in the depths of the crisis in April.

By December, even though there were no significant restrictions in place anywhere in Australia, paid hours for single parents remained 10% lower than they had been a year earlier.

This was at a time when the hours worked by couple parents had recovered quickly, and was higher than a year earlier.



Employment for single parents fell more than 10% between December 2019 and September 2020, and is still 5% lower than in December 2019.

AlsoRead...

Ryan: Building real freedom through e-commerce

Ryan: Building real freedom through e-commerce

27 November 2025
Design Australia Group: Redefining Drafting as the engine of housing growth

Design Australia Group: Redefining Drafting as the engine of housing growth

26 November 2025

About 50,000 single parents dropped out of the workforce altogether during the first lockdown – 11% of all single parents.

Why was the COVID recession so bad for single parents?

Many single parents had no choice but to stop working

One reason would be that the loss of formal and informal childcare and the need to manage remote learning meant many single parents had little choice but to stop working.

Also, single parents would be over-represented in the job-loss figures because they are over-represented in insecure work.

In August 2019, a quarter of single parents held casual jobs without paid leave. These jobs – many of them in COVID-vulnerable sectors such as retail and hospitality – were among the first to be lost during the lockdowns.

Many more were in casual jobs, ineligible for JobKeeper

Importantly, more than half of single parents in casual jobs had been in those particular jobs for less than a year, meaning the rules made them ineligible for JobKeeper support.

In a survey by the Melbourne Institute, only 13% of single mothers reported that they were receiving JobKeeper in late 2020, compared to 18% of mothers in couples and 33% of fathers in couples.

The outsized impact of the COVID recession on single parents is even more of a concern when we consider that they were among the most disadvantaged Australians before COVID.

Many had already been stripped of payments

In 2018, a third of single-parent families were living in poverty (compared to less than 10% of couples with dependent children). One fifth of single parents reported that they regularly skipped buying essential items.

And incomes for single parents were falling even before the crisis: between 2016 and 2018, when the national median annual income increased from $48,360 to $49,805, the median for single parents fell from $38,000 to $34,000.

Decisions by successive governments have contributed to this outcome.


From 2006, the Howard government’s Welfare to Work program pushed new single parents claiming income support onto the Newstart unemployment benefit – $87 per week less than the Single Parenting Payment – if their youngest was eight or older.

The decision pushed about 20,000 single parents on to a lower payment.

In 2013, the Gillard government pushed another 80,000 single parents onto Newstart by extending the policy to single parents who had been claiming parenting payments before 2006, almost doubling the proportion of single parents in poverty, lifting it to 59%.

After Welfare to Work came ParentsNext

Then in 2016, the Turnbull government launched ParentsNext, with the stated intention of helping single parents with children as young as six months to return to work.

It included so-called participation plans, under which parents could be stripped of payments unless they performed mandated activities – for example, taking their child to swimming lessons.

A Senate inquiry recommended it “not continue in its current form”. Instead the 2020 budget set aside $24.7 million to “streamline the successful ParentsNext program”.


The COVID crisis and a series of government decisions before that are condemning hundreds of thousands of Australian children to growing up in poverty, and exacerbates intergenerational disadvantage.

Here are three things governments could do to make a difference:

  • Significantly increase in the permanent rate of JobSeeker. This would make a huge difference for unemployed single parents with children aged eight or older who thanks to earlier government decisions have to rely on JobSeeker while they make the transition to work. The Federal Government plans to increase the permanent rate of JobSeeker by $25 a week.
  • Make childcare cheaper. This would help single parents get back into paid work sooner and expand opportunities for early education for their children. Cost is the major barrier for families wanting childcare. The Grattan Institute has identified a series of options to improve affordability.
  • Classify single parents in the workforce as “essential workers” for the purposes of any future lockdowns. This would mean their children could continue going to school and childcare.

These changes would help single parents raising the adults of the future, who are at risk of slipping further behind.

Tom Crowley, Associate, Grattan Institute; Danielle Wood, Chief executive officer, Grattan Institute, and Esther Suckling, Intern, Grattan Institute, Grattan Institute

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Tags: SB001
DMCA.com Protection Status

SUBSCRIBE to our NEWSLETTER

[mc4wp_form id=”2384248″]

Don't Miss

The evolution of Aesthetic Surgery through the lens of Dr Kourosh Tavakoli

by Pauline Torongo
4 December 2025
The evolution of Aesthetic Surgery through the lens of Dr. Kourosh Tavakoli
Health & Wellness

As global interest in Australian cosmetic surgery continues to grow, the combination of regulation, research and emerging digital tools is...

Read moreDetails

Ryan: Building real freedom through e-commerce

by Pauline Torongo
27 November 2025
Ryan: Building real freedom through e-commerce
Business & Finance

Ryan’s greatest achievement isn’t any single business or revenue milestone — it’s the ecosystem he’s built through the Change community.

Read moreDetails

Design Australia Group: Redefining Drafting as the engine of housing growth

by Pauline Torongo
26 November 2025
Design Australia Group: Redefining Drafting as the engine of housing growth
Business & Finance

Australia is under pressure to build homes faster, but design bottlenecks slow progress. Design Australia Group is fixing this by...

Read moreDetails

Louis Guy Detata builds Global Trading Empires through autonomous systems and disciplined leadership

by Pauline Torongo
25 November 2025
Louis Guy Detata builds Global Trading Empires through autonomous systems and disciplined leadership
Business & Finance

The path from investment banking to leading a global trading platform has taught Louis Detata that sustainable success requires more...

Read moreDetails

Burning Eucalyptus Wood: Tips, Advantages, Disadvantages & Alternatives

by Fazila Olla-Logday
20 November 2025
Image Supplied
Enviroment

Learn about burning eucalyptus wood for stoves and fireplaces. Discover benefits, drawbacks, harvesting tips, and better alternative firewood options for...

Read moreDetails

Everything Parents Need to Know About Baby Soft Play and Why It’s a Game Changer

by Fazila Olla-Logday
11 November 2025
Everything Parents Need to Know About Baby Soft Play
Health & Wellness

Baby soft play is a fun, safe, and educational way for little ones to explore and grow. Discover the benefits...

Read moreDetails

WOMAD Sets Up a New Camp in Wiltshire – Australian festival fans take note!

by Kris Griffiths
11 November 2025
Kumbia Boruka brought their reggae and dancehall flavour to the Taste the World Stage at WOMAD 2024 - Credit - Mike Massaro
Entertainment

With its 2026 edition moving to Neston Park in England, WOMAD offers Aussie music lovers a chance to reconnect with global...

Read moreDetails
Load More

Copyright © Blue Sky Publications Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
australiantimes.co.uk is a division of Blue Sky Publications Ltd. Reproduction without permission prohibited. DMCA.com Protection Status

  • About us
  • Write for Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
  • T&Cs, Privacy and GDPR
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Weather
    • Sport
    • Technology
    • Business & Finance
      • Currency Zone
    • Lotto Results
      • The Lott
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Horoscopes
    • Health & Wellness
    • Recipes
  • Travel
  • Expat Life
  • Move to Australia

Copyright © Blue Sky Publications Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
australiantimes.co.uk is a division of Blue Sky Publications Ltd. Reproduction without permission prohibited. DMCA.com Protection Status

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Weather
    • Sport
    • Technology
    • Business & Finance
      • Currency Zone
    • Lotto Results
      • The Lott
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Horoscopes
    • Health & Wellness
    • Recipes
  • Travel
  • Expat Life
  • Move to Australia

Copyright © Blue Sky Publications Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
australiantimes.co.uk is a division of Blue Sky Publications Ltd. Reproduction without permission prohibited. DMCA.com Protection Status