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You certainly seem to be taking a balanced view in terms of acknowledging that there are problems with the Labor proposal etc.
A major concern in any "compensation" sort of proposal is what defines a retiree.
I'll be politically incorrect and straight to the point and say that for anyone employed on the basis of physical strength or appearance, and there are huge numbers of both, well then the superannuation preservation age (60) is unrealistic and the Age Pension age (67) is silly to the point of farce.
It's politically incorrect to say it but I will. If you're applying for jobs facing the public and aren't reasonably good looking then forget it with rather a lot of employers. There's usually the token older person so it all looks legit but such jobs are overwhelmingly skewed toward younger workers particularly women. For most blue collar work it's much the same, there are exceptions but it's very heavily skewed to those under 50 in practice.
So we have a situation where many in their 50's or in a few cases even 40's find themselves in a situation where either they're self funded involuntary retirees, done completely outside of superannuation, or they're going to spend the next ~15 years on the dole jumping through an endless stream of hoops in order to claim a payment that's barely adequate. It's a not uncommon scenario in practice.
Those who've seen it coming tend to be the people who invest most heavily outside of super and that's motivated by fear far more than any desire to actually be rich. Those people have, of course, already paid more tax by choosing this course of action given they'll be paying tax on the returns from those investments at their marginal rate whilst they're working. Plus they won't be claiming welfare, avoiding that being the primary reason they've invested.
So in any "compensation" arrangement I'd want to see it apply to retirees as such with age not forming part of that definition. If someone's a self-funded retiree at whatever age well then they're a self-funded retiree.
Those in this situation tend to be "off the record" almost completely. Not in employment, not on any form of welfare, not drawing on superannuation, paying a bit of tax but not a lot. They largely don't exist from a statistical perspective, they're not captured in anything which records employment, unemployment, pensioners or those living on superannuation since they're doing none of those. As such they're easily overlooked but personally I know a few so it's a real thing most certainly.![]()
I can see Smurfs point about a certain number of people being early involuntary retirees eking out a small income from shares and dividend imputation rebates. How many ? As he points out it is hard to say. I suggest he is more likely to notice these situations because he most clearly identifies with it and seems to live/work in a circle of people in that possible situation.
I have already suggested that in the world of real politics Labour will come under enormous pressure to soften it's stance on this policy and allow a certain about of dividend imputation credits for minor recipients.
But the facts are that a very large amount of the $5-6-7 Billion in tax rebates is flowing to a core of very wealthy people who have structured their investments to exploit this creative tax loophole. This is the tax target.
There has been an analysis of the recipients of these rebates. It's not that long. The highlights are
Of the 0.1% of individuals with credits between A$20,000 and A$40,000, the average cash refund is A$8,743. The average taxable income for the group is just over A$68,000 and the average superannuation balance is just under A$721,000.
For the top group who have credits in excess of A$40,000, the average cash refund is almost A$63,000, over A$1,200 a week. The average taxable income for the group is the lowest of all groups at A$17,735, falling below the lowest income tax threshold. Almost half (45%) have no taxable income. Their average superannuation balance is A$1,344,782.
Allowing the 99% of people who receive minimal rebates (up to $40840k a year average for only a very small number .8%) to keep their rebates would be a small price to pay to target a small group of very wealthy people who have a nice little rort on their hands.
https://www.solepurposetest.com/opinion/labor-dividend-imputation-policy-hit/