we're better able to improve Australian lives than before
- Written by Glyn Davis, Distinguished Professor of Political Science, Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University

The United States Post Office has just announced the 33rd stamp in its literary arts series – a striking image of novelist and essayist Ursula Le Guin[1].
Behind the portrait is artwork depicting a scene from The Left Hand of Darkness[2], Le Guin’s 1969 novel. It features the Gethenians, a species which is generically asexual, but randomly become male or female during estrus.

The radical implications of Rawlsian justice are not apparent in the ways Australia and other nations deal with poverty in their midst. Australia has never been particularly fair The Melbourne Institute’s long sequence of HILDA household income and labour dynamics surveys point to a strong correlation between poverty in childhood and poverty in adult life – a situation where poverty begets poverty[9]. Australian rates of poverty slightly exceed[10] OECD averages, meaning the poor are indeed always with us. Our response to poverty began with private charity, but early in the twentieth century moved to government programs, principally payments. Senior and invalid pensions began in 1909 followed by unemployment benefits, pensions for veterans, and support for mothers and children and health after World War I. Read more: Land of the 'fair go' no more: wealth in Australia is becoming more unequal[11]
Australia has never pursued a substantial redistribution of wealth. Benefit payments remain modest and usually means-tested. Elections consistently suggest Australians are comfortable with limits to public generosity; we choose governments that tax and spend slightly more than in the United States but a good deal less than in Europe. As a result, many Australians grow up in poverty, and a significant number pass it on to their children. Even a single year in poverty during childhood harms likely income in adulthood, and the longer someone is in poverty in childhood the less chance they have of escaping poverty[12] in adulthood. A long-tailed lottery This makes the lottery of birth a lifelong inheritance, with consequences for access to education, health, employment and social capital.
For those who find Rawls too confronting, there are other ways of thinking about our responsibilities toward those less fortunate. One is to look through the lens of what Nobel Laureate economist Amartya Sen labels “capability[13]”, an approach at one time[14] adopted by Australia’s treasury[15]. Capability is the powerful idea that each citizen should be equipped to lead a life they have reason to value[16]. Investment through public provision – schools, hospitals, pensions and so on – is part of ensuring capability. Practically, this might mean a national disability insurance scheme with excellent support coordination rather than a pension. But improvements through public investment can be hard to deliver in practice. Capability means recognising and responding to individual needs, but personalising services is expensive and sometimes problematic. “Why are you treating me differently from others?” is a reasonable question. New Zealand points to a way out

References
- ^ Ursula Le Guin (about.usps.com)
- ^ The Left Hand of Darkness (en.wikipedia.org)
- ^ the king was pregnant (www.theguardian.com)
- ^ the poor you will always have with you (biblehub.com)
- ^ veil of ignorance (open.library.okstate.edu)
- ^ Theory of Justice (www.hup.harvard.edu)
- ^ what is this good thing that no man wants for himself (books.google.com.au)
- ^ Disability and single parenthood loom large in inherited poverty (theconversation.com)
- ^ poverty begets poverty (melbourneinstitute.unimelb.edu.au)
- ^ exceed (www.oecd.org)
- ^ Land of the 'fair go' no more: wealth in Australia is becoming more unequal (theconversation.com)
- ^ escaping poverty (melbourneinstitute.unimelb.edu.au)
- ^ capability (plato.stanford.edu)
- ^ one time (www.smh.com.au)
- ^ Australia’s treasury (treasury.gov.au)
- ^ have reason to value (treasury.gov.au)
- ^ performance indicators (www.amhocn.org)
- ^ shared requirement (www.themandarin.com.au)
- ^ Our Public Service Our Future (pmc.gov.au)
- ^ On Life’s Lottery, (www.hachette.com.au)
Authors: Glyn Davis, Distinguished Professor of Political Science, Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University