Ok, so I decided to look at the numbers yesterday, and they
weren’t pretty. I discovered that my gross earnings over the last 8 weeks are
approximately 60% of my fortnightly take-home (i.e., AFTER TAX) income in my
last job. In fact, each week now I earn less than half of what I used to pay in
tax each week.
Now – I know that money’s not everything, but I also know
that’s a statement that’s usually made by people who have enough of it, ha ha.
So I won’t be saying it any more. I’ll be too busy trying to stay one-step
ahead of Centrelink, on whose tender mercies I do not want to fling myself.
Here’s why.
Yesterday I thought to see if I would be eligible for a
low-income health care card. Hell yes, I most certainly am, seeing as I earn
very little income now. So – how do I get one? Well, I can go to the local tele-centre
and use their special Centrelink phone, sit in a ghastly empty room that’s
painted bright orange to make you feel better about the fact that you’re needy
enough to be checking out Social Security options. I can talk to a bright recorded
voice who tells me which buttons to press on the phone just so that I can be
registered to talk to someone real. Yep, you don’t even get to talk to a real
human being.
Or, if I get tired of that, or just too damned demoralised
to continue going round and round in telephone circles, I can go home, get on
my own computer and use up all my printer ink printing out an application form
for a health care card. Get this: for a Low-Income Health Care Card, which is
valid for EIGHT weeks, and based on your previous EIGHT weeks’ gross earnings,
you have to sell your soul and fill out a TWENTY-EIGHT PAGE application (which
would probably take another EIGHT weeks!) give Centrelink details of your
drivers licence, medicare card, surrender your passport, give them your
first-born child blah blah blah (ok, I exaggerate just a teensy bit.) No bloody
thanks – and if you have to fill out a 28-page application form just to get 8
weeks of cheaper prescriptions and bulk-billing at the doctor, I shudder to think
of the hoops you have to jump through to actually get the dole! Amazing! Negotiating
the bureaucratic labyrinth and filling out all the ghastly paperwork would
waste valuable dunny-cleaning time, and involve a whole lot more shit than
dunny-cleaning does as well!
So – while I’ve paid my taxes all my working life, it looks
like I won’t be getting any of them back from Centrelink anytime soon. I can
access my superannuation when I’m 55, so I just need to hang in there for 15
months. Oh, I can get my super early – I checked – but I’d have to give back
21% of it to the government in tax. Um…. Didn’t I already pay tax on the salary
from whence my super contributions came??? I don’t get it. The government
bean-counters are working their white man magic and keeping this little bunny
under-the-thumb-in-the-dark-at-their- mercy.
Don’t mind me letting off steam. I’m feeling like I’ve been
the butt of a big governmental joke right now. “Work hard, pay your taxes and
the country will look after you.” No it bloody won’t! (and this is a country
with allegedly fabulous social security provisions…but I suppose that's all relative, isn't it, and a topic for another time. This post is All About Me Me Me ;-) )
I suppose I’m feeling a bit sorry for myself – that itchy
monstrosity on my back turned out to be shingles, and I feel like crap. I have
bugger-all energy, my arm hurts, my head hurts, and the last thing I want to
think about is how to stay one step ahead of Centrelink and still pay my bills.
Ok, so Betty’s thinking-cap is firmly squashed onto her
little round head. When Basil smacked me in the head at 4am, these were the
thoughts I came up with:
- Bugger off Basil – we don’t
get up until 6am.
- Hassle the school for work
now that the Vic school hols are over – be the squeaky wheel.
- Put up signs around town
advertising my services as a brilliant tutor.
- Contact Cann River School
to follow up re casual work there (70kms away).
- Contact Marshmead (MLC’s
outdoor ed campus on the other side of the inlet, accessible only by boat –
wheeeeeee!) re creative writing workshops each term.
- Try to get more cleaning
work (I think I’m about to add a fifth cleaning gig to my list, but now
that tourist season is over, I suspect there won’t be much work to be had
in the holiday accommodation area for a while now.)
- Buy a lottery ticket.
- Sell the Harley. WHAT?
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
- You’re clearly delirious/deranged.
Go back to sleep. It’s only 4.30am
- Ok.
4 comments:
Shingles! Bummer.
I hear you on the super thang though, I'm not putting in an extra cent above what I have to. Why? Because by the time I get around to getting at it, there likely won't be anything there, or it won't be worth squat.
Oh wait, I just got an email from Gaddafi's daughter and she's going to send me 25 million to manage on her behalf. I get to keep 25%. It clearly states it's not spam so pop the champagne Betty, our problems are over (naturally I'll share this windfall with you).
Maybe I should buy a lottery ticket too...
Sue, unless you've been putting in a fair bit more than the minimum for a long time, the employer contributions and earnings generally make up a much larger part of your total benefit than your contributions. Neither of those is taxed going in.
When the government is involved it can never be good for the people. They will always find a way to come out on the big side of a money situation.
We can't take social security until age 65-67 I think if you wait even longer your monthly check increases. They are talking of raising the age even higher too. buggers.
Shingles does not sound like any fun at all. Hopefully they can fix you up quick.
@Lemmiwinks - lol, Easy Street here we come, ha ha!
@Chris - I feel so much better now :-P Seriously - I have some real issues with the nanny-state aspect of superannuation - but I'm pleased to know that I will only be taxed once on it. Thanks for the info.
@Trobairitz - they keep raising the pension age here too, seeing as people are living longer - I think they're hoping people will die on the job and never have to access the old age pension in their twilight years. :-(
Post a Comment