Julia
In Memoriam
- Joined
- 10 May 2005
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You know the answer to this already. Obviously, because there has to be some incentive to the individual to lock away their savings in an environment which - to offset its tax advantage - is vulnerable to the sticky fingers of governments. No one would do it if there were not the tax advantage.Why is it that people who become quite wealthy and keep it in the super system receive more tax concessions than someone who is doing the same thing outside of it? They both have the same goal, but are taxed differently.
Exactly. Your account above, Bill, pretty much mirrors my own.20 years ago I was a bit like you. I worked hard, saved hard and invested hard outside of super. I put nothing at all extra into it. I had the same ambition of being self funded well before collection age. I achieved this goal and accepted the tax liabilities that I had to pay. It worked for me and it can work for anyone, nothing wrong with investing outside of super under those circumstances.
Fast forward 20 years and now it's collection age for my wife and I. We think differently now, we are moving our assets aggressively into super (I mean I'd rather pay 15% tax than 30%). If you were my age I'm sure you would rather pay less tax than the marginal rates.
People who can be self funded before preservation age are few and far between. The Government doesn't really worry about us, we are doing ok, we are not a burden on society. On the other hand the tax incentives are there for those that can't save. You have lower taxes, government co-contributions and that new low income payment going in boosting your balance. Without any of those incentives people just wouldn't save with super and we would end up where we were 25 years ago with very little money going into super.
+1/Before compulsory super nearly everybody on the factory floor relied on the Government pension at retirement. It is better now, I support super as it is, anything less and it just wouldn't be worthwhile putting in and a lot of people will end up on the miserable government pension.
Bill, once you move into pension phase, I doubt there's too much likelihood of the government risking the political repercussions of altering the existing tax free conditions.Just a note, even now only a few Months out we are reluctant to put a lump sum into our super "just in case they change the rules". We will wait until the last few weeks before we know for sure we will be able to access our money. Make no mistake, wind back super or tax it heavily and people won't put in, me included.
You don't. You can save whatever you like. No one is stopping you retiring as soon as you can afford it.It is probably that I hate being told what to do.... if only you didn't have to work until you were 60, or probably 65, by the time I get there.
It is probably that I hate being told what to do.... if only you didn't have to work until you were 60, or probably 65, by the time I get there.
I meant within super. I can and do save outside of super.
Can't you access it in the US if you retire early? Singapore too perhaps?
There used to be a loop hole where you could leave Australia, sign a stat dec and get your super, then come back.
I think they closed that up about 10years ago.
A person currently earning 100K pa will receive 9K per year in compulsory super leaving 16K [21% of ordinary wages] of concessional cap to utilise through salary sacrifice if they wish.
Back of the envelope and using the following assumptions:
40 Years of contributions; 3% Inflation; 6%pa Gross dividend; 6%pa Capital Gain.
Directing that 21% of an ordinary wage to super would accumulate 35 times ordinary wages in today’s dollars after 40 years. By changing nothing other than the taxation to marginal PAYE rates the figure drops to 16 times for outside super.
The magnitude of the tax concessions means government tinkering is a risk but the rewards are pretty substantial also. Don’t just look at the risks. The earlier you contribute the less in total you need to contribute to achieve a given outcome. Missing the early generous incentives and the grandfathering arrangements to protect them has been a risk to late accumulators.
Myfor the case in favour of utilising super structure early.
This article probably highlights, how stupid it is to get out of shape about pensioners with $1m in super, as being fat cats that require extra taxing.
http://www.theage.com.au/business/millionaires-snub-taxman-20130506-2j3pr.html
I wonder how many of them used the very generous super caps (especially from previous years) to reduce their taxable income....
The pension system in Aus needs a serious shake up. The assets test cutoffs should be at least halved and only those on a full aged pension should be eligible for the Health Care Card (can add up to $4-5,000 in benefits over the course of a year). PPOR should also be included for the assets test above the median or average house price.
I see at least 1 couple a week who are whinging that they are only going to get $80 a fortnight in pension and ‘how am I supposed to live off that??’ meanwhile they are living in a 5x3 on 1200sqm within 1km from Cottesloe beach in Perth (looking at a cool $2m+ there) and $650,000 in a Term Deposit. The most common one is ‘I paid taxes all my life I deserve it’. Yep so I guess the years of education for you and your kids, the visits to the hospital, the roads you drive on everyday etc etc don’t count?
It makes me happy when I see folks on Today Tonight banging on about how sh*t the pension is. It should be. It should be enough to keep you alive, healthy and nothing else. Where is the incentive for people to take a long term view and take responsibility for their own retirement? At the moment we are just seeing 60 year olds hock themselves to the eyeballs for a palace of a PPOR because ‘we will just pay it off with our super and then go on the pension’.
Sorry for the rant but it sh*ts me to tears that I am going to have to subsidise this crap through my own tax dollars for another 40 years.
One does have to wonder why a couple at that stage of their lives still have an outstanding debt of $350,000.
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