Bill M
Self Funded Retiree
- Joined
- 4 January 2008
- Posts
- 2,132
- Reactions
- 740
Take as much money out of your super as you can between now and May 2013.
Because Wayne Swan will tax it mightily if you take it out after that date.
If they go down that track, why would people put money into super, currently a married couple can recieve $36k before paying income tax.
I can see they may remove the tax free pension after 60 and replace that with a standard 19% offset.
This would bring it more in line with standard income tax brackets.
Nah I don't think they would be that silly to do it during an election year. It would only be more amo for Abbott to use against labor and would alienate some of their supporters. I reckon they will leave it alone for this year.
Exactly, the more they slug the less likely people will contribute. I am sweating it as it's near collection time for my wife and I and the last thing we need is a big change at this time.
promotes a society of workers and savers. What a joke
When has any government every encouraged savers? The whole Western capitalist ethos is based around consumption and spending. In fact you are better living outside your means, or at least treated equally, especially if you are a too big to fail institution...
Nah I don't think they would be that silly to do it during an election year. It would only be more amo for Abbott to use against labor and would alienate some of their supporters. I reckon they will leave it alone for this year.
Exactly, the more they slug the less likely people will contribute. I am sweating it as it's near collection time for my wife and I and the last thing we need is a big change at this time.
It was Labor (Keating) that drove super and had plans to raise it higher under Howard he refused to raise the level instead bought votes from the middle class (Howard battlers) instead we all know how thats going.
Snap, you're not Robinson Crusoe, if they keep messing with super people will get out.
Prior to super being introduced, everyone spent what they earned and hoped to pay off their house, by the time they retired.
Now people have placed faith in the super system and saved money to fund their retirement. The government is seeing those savings, which previously wouldn't have been there as a loss of tax base.
Typical dumb ideology, well tax the crap out of it, I for one will pull my contributions out and as GG says, enjoy myself spending. For the first time in my life.
I would be surprised if, within the next 5 years, there weren't limits imposed on how much you can withdraw and spend from super.
Well then why would you put extra money in?
Why wouldn't you just enjoy the money now? and allow the government to pick up the slack.
I think there won't be a limit of withdrawls when in the pension phase, because as everyone says, it's costing a fortune(better they take it out).
Therefore there is more chance of an increase of taxing on the accumulation phase.
Even if they place an exit tax on withdrawls it can only be on taxable contributions, after tax contributions have to be tax free otherwise it's double taxing.
Admittedly I haven't seen figures that confirm this but I suspect the ones that have the cash to put much extra in aren't the ones that are likely to end up on the age pension because they run out of cash relatively early in their retirement. In other words if the net effect of generous treatment of extra payments into super is that well off retirees have a more comfortable self-funded retirement then they otherwise would have it's not clear that it's a good trade for the taxpayer.
I'm not sure a cash strapped Government will share your philosophical opposition to double taxation.
On that basis, if you put your after tax contribution into super, its earnings are taxed at 15%, no tax free threshold.
If they decide to tax your withdrawl of that money, why would you put it in super?
They would have a mass exudus of after tax withdrawls, super funds would collapse overnight.lol
Its a bit like having money in the bank, if they taxed you on the interest and then tax you when you take it out. Why would you put it in the bank?
Its a bit like having money in the bank, if they taxed you on the interest and then tax you when you take it out. Why would you put it in the bank?
I don't think the supersystem as a whole is nearly as dependent on additional payments as you think. Withdrawals could still be taxed at a concessional rate (rather than as ordinary income).
My income gets taxed. I then use part of that taxed income to buy some shares. I sell 6 months later at a profit. I get taxed again. I then put that money in a savings account, which gets taxed again.
"The Australian" is reporting that the government is considering the threshold for this as only $800K!!
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?