The government’s proposal to trial drug-testing of welfare recipients, first flagged in 2017, is back on the parliamentary agenda. Initially opposed by the Senate, the LNP will be reliant on the crossbench to pass the Bill, which was tabled yesterday. Most recently, independent Senator Jacqui Lambie said she won’t support it unless money is earmarked for rehabilitation facilities for drug addicts.
While Finance Minister Mattias Cormann says drug addiction prevents people on Newstart from gaining employment, many experts disagree. The, for instance, says the plan stigmatises jobseekers, while others, like, say it simply won’t disincentivise drug use.
It works very well to add to the demonisation of people on Newstart
Some University of Sydney academics agree with the government's critics.,Associate Professor of Social Work & Policy Studies in the, says the plan is emblematic of the "conservative morality" of the religious right in government, and it won't work.
"There is no evidence that this type of interventionhas been successful as a means of getting the unemployed into the workforce," she said.
"It works very well to add to the demonisation of people on Newstart - associating 'dole bludgers' with drug use, addiction and by association, crime."
Asserting it is linked with the Liberal National Party's "Social Darwinism", Dr Phillips says it disregards the social and economic reasons for unemployment, "especially given the rise in the number of people over 55 currently on Newstart."
It only adds to the stigma and the shame that we know many unemployed people already face
, a public policy expert in the, concurred. He referred to the "very high" rates of welfare stigma in Australia, despite the fact that it has one of the strictest welfare regimes in the world. "Unemployed people face this [stigma] more than any other benefit recipients," he said.
"If and when governments add drug testing to this scenario, it only adds to the stigma and the shame."
Like Dr Phillips, he pointed to the lack of evidence linking drug testing with lower rates of welfare dependency. "In fact, benefit recipients who are sanctioned by having some or the bulk of their payments docked, for whatever reason, will find it even harder to find work," he added.
Punitive responses to health issues are not the answer
Though she held the same view as her University of Sydney colleagues,,Director of the, naturally took a medical approach to the issue.
"Drug and alcohol problems are health problems. We have effective treatments for them," she said.
"A caring society would offer help rather than take away their payments."
, also from the,echoed this perspective:“Punitive responses to health issues are not the answer.”