Friday, November 26, 2010

Planning for the retirement tsunami

I recently read an editorial in The Australian by Peter van Onselen entitled ‘Mexican standoff over super serves no one.’

It identified some of the more controversial issues in super at the moment, including the increase in the super guarantee rate to 12% from 9%, the low concessional contribution cap and the heavy tax penalties for exceeding the contributions caps.

Of interest were the author’s comments about superannuation in Australia in the context of the fiscal pressures that will be caused by our ageing population. As Mr van Onselen notes, if the government doesn’t fix super, ‘it is the equivalent of warning about an approaching tsunami without planning for its arrival.’ How right he is.

I would add to this that in formulating a plan for superannuation, we are only hurting ourselves when we make frequent changes to the system. Taking the tsunami analogy further, if people become confused about the latest plan of action when the tsunami hits – or they lose confidence in the latest plan – they simply adopt a ‘let’s worry about it when it arrives’ response. Clearly, this can’t be the approach for superannuation if the objective is a comfortable retirement for all Australians.

For super, the plan for the arrival of the retirement tsunami needs to be right – and the time to get it right is now. Superannuation has been subject to more than its fair share of tinkering by various governments over the years and this has eroded the confidence of Australians saving for their retirement through superannuation. More changes in recent years have resulted in many people being slugged with severe excess contributions tax penalties when they were simply trying to save for their retirement following the ‘new rules.’ Who wouldn’t lose confidence in the system?

So, as the government finalises its response to the Cooper Review into Australia’s superannuation system (we’re expecting a response before Christmas), one would hope that both sides of politics use this last opportunity to get it right. The message is simple: fix super in the best interests of Australians, and then leave it alone.

We have an obligation to overlook political short-termism for the benefit of Australia’s retirement savings in the future. After all, tomorrow’s budget balancing act will be acutely felt when the largest cost to government comes from supporting retirees via the aged pension and the health system. Indeed, the Mexican standoff over super serves no one.

1 comment:

  1. One colleague (who is closer to retirement than I) mentioned that Superannuation is the tax minimisation strategy of choice, but the ATO hate it.

    Typical short term view by the ATO - being a self funded retiree obviously reduces the drain on the public purse in future years, meaning less tax dollars needed to fund pensions etc.

    The current limits on the amount of super that can be contributed are ridiculous.

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