Skip to content
Government Federal

Do we really know what Australia’s position on poverty is?

The Brotherhood of St. Laurence 2 mins read

This week, the Brotherhood of St. Laurence (BSL) will host international poverty measurement expert Professor Sabina Alkire to gain a clearer insight into how Australia can better measure and track poverty rates.

In 1975 a landmark Commission on poverty in Australia called for the establishment of a national poverty measure. Now, nearly 50 years later, we still don’t have a nationally agreed definition or measures of poverty, agreed objectives to reduce it or indicators to track progress.

Australia falls well behind countries like Canada and New Zealand in setting clear, unified goals for poverty reduction. How can we effectively work to eradicate poverty without a comprehensive understanding of the issue? Without a nationally agreed benchmark for poverty reduction, it is impossible for governments to measure success in preventing and alleviating poverty.

The Federal Government’s own Productivity Commission recently estimated that one in seven Australians, or over 3.5 million people, are living in poverty – the highest recorded level since 2001. One in ten Australians are in persistent poverty.

BSL has long called for Australia to adopt a more comprehensive approach to measuring poverty that integrates two critical components.

First, we need nationally agreed income-based measures that clearly identify the number of people living in poverty, including regional disparities.

Second, and crucially, these income measures must be paired with a broader poverty index that reveals the causes of poverty and highlights actionable solutions. This approach considers access to essential services like health, education, housing and transport—key factors that directly affect quality of life.

Professor Alkire’s data driven method for measuring and working to decrease poverty rates ensures that people and institutions are deeply involved at a local level when deciding what needs to be measured to determine who is ‘poor’ and most importantly, how we can track improvement against key indicators.

Her work with Professor James Foster resulted in the Alkire-Foster (AF) method for measuring multidimensional poverty. This flexible technique allows for the creation of poverty measures that are relevant in the local context by incorporating various dimensions and has been successfully implemented in over 100 countries to help lift millions of people out of poverty.

During her visit to Australia, Professor Alkire will share insights into how her work can be applied in an Australian setting – specifically through informing policy design and budget decisions – to give us a clearer picture on how we can accurately measure poverty and work to eradicate it.

Her advice will also inform an ongoing joint initiative between BSL and the University of Melbourne, ‘Defining and Measuring Poverty’, which draws together experts and partners from economics, social policy, public health, education, gender, disability, and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander affairs to assess current poverty frameworks and measures and identify a way forward for Australia. This builds on considerable work on poverty measurement from partners across the sector.

BSL will continue to advocate for a national definition and official measures of poverty. Establishing these benchmarks is an essential step in breaking the cycle of persistent poverty that Australia has been stuck in for decades.

For interviews, contact [email protected] or 0482 163 395

More from this category

  • Energy, Government Federal
  • 15/07/2025
  • 08:49
Australian Conservation Foundation

The era of business holding back climate action must end

In response to Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry claims a national 2035 emissions reduction target would undermine “productivity, competitiveness and viability,” the Australian Conservation Foundation’s climate and energy program manager Gavan McFadzean said: “With huge opportunities in renewable exports and manufacturing, and more frequent and extreme weather events already impacting the Australian economy, the days of Australian business being a drag on climate ambition are over. “High emissions economies like Australia will be left behind in the rapidly growing clean energy trade unless we have a strong 2035 target and the net zero plan to get there. “A strong…

  • Government Federal, Indigenous
  • 12/07/2025
  • 05:25
Climate Media Centre

MEDIA ALERT – Murujuga officially listed as Australia’s latest Cultural World Heritage site

Friday 11 July 2025 Murujuga, the world’s largest rock art site located on the Burrup Peninsula in West Australia, has officially been confirmed as a Cultural World Heritage Site at the 47th World Heritage Committee (WHC) at the UNESCO Headquarters in Paris. Murujuga was listed with an amendment by UNESCO member states for the Australian government to continue research and monitoring of industrial impacts on the site; this is reference to the impacts of pollution from Woodsides North West Shelf LNG processing facility, which research has shown is accelerating the weathering and degradation of the over one million petroglyphs which…

  • Government Federal, Taxation
  • 11/07/2025
  • 17:19
Australian Taxation Office

ATO holds more GST fraudsters to account

The Australian Taxation Office’s (ATO) hunt for GST fraudsters continues as four more individuals aresentenced following action of Operation Protego. These recentsentencings reinforce the ATO’s unwavering commitment in investigating and holding all offenders to account. ATO Deputy Commissioner and Serious Financial Crime Taskforce (SFCT) Chief John Ford said the ATO’s ability to detect and halt GST fraud is unwavering. ‘Our fraud detection and prevention capabilities are advanced thanks to partnerships, technologies, and riskmodels all working together to stay ahead of fraudsters and criminals,’ Mr Ford said. Included in thesesentencings are individuals who, at the time of offending, were current employees…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.