Cash for care under the NDIS: Shaping care workers’ working conditions?

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Abstract

The Australian National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) introduces a national cash-for-care model for disability support and care. The NDIS has been hailed as a significant advance in social care provision for people with disability, bringing both additional funding and choice and control. However, little attention has been paid to how the shift to a cash-for-care system will impact on the working conditions of disability support workers. The international literature suggests three main factors shape better or poorer employment outcomes for workers in cash-for-care schemes: the extent to which cost containment underpins scheme design; the regulation and monitoring of care delivery; and the regulation of care employment. In this article, we explore these factors through an analysis of the planning, design and initial implementation of the NDIS and make a preliminary assessment of how the new scheme might shape care workers’ employment conditions.

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APA

Macdonald, F., & Charlesworth, S. (2016). Cash for care under the NDIS: Shaping care workers’ working conditions? Journal of Industrial Relations, 58(5), 627–646. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022185615623083

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