I agree with you, the problem is what about the blue collar workers, who have been saving in super rather than the bank?
It is still their money, if they paid full tax on it, well it is like putting it in the bank, isn't it?
If they stop lump sum withdrawals, will it include the tax free component?
I really don't understand this sort of thinking. What's wrong with aspiring to be a self-funded retiree?
I have no intention of ever taking any pension and living off the fairly meagre income that would allow that. My aim is to have enough retirement funds to generate an income many times in excess of the pension.
Getting funds into concessionally taxed super will help achieve this, so it makes perfect sense to be putting extra in now.
This is a prudent recommendation because it will only affect wealthy pension recipients - those who own a home (of any value), with additional assets of $100,000 or more for singles and $150,000 or more for couples. For Morrison, it is also appealing because it avoids the debate about whether to count the family home in the means test.[/I] My bolds
Well if said blue collar worker takes out a lump sum and pisses it away on cruises etc. and five years later gets the pension then they become the taxpayer's problem.
I understand with the disability pension if say you are in an accident and would otherwise be eligible for the disability pension but receive a compensation payout the Government will say to you "that payout should last 5 years and you'll be ineligible for the disability pension during those 5 years so make it last".
If people could take lump sum withdrawals on the proviso that they are ineligible for the pension for a certain number of years (depending on the size of the withdrawal) that would be one thing but we aren't going to do that so restricting lump sum withdrawals is the only option.
Yes but why should the taxpayer help you generate an income many times in excess of the pension through favourable tax concessions?
Letting people take lump sum super payouts, then having them on the pension defeats the purpose of super.
It should be an investment vehicle and gives the owner an income (like dividends) to survive on, instead of them relying on the Government for help.
David Murray was on Richo+Jones (Sky) a few weeks ago. He was brilliant and they spoke about 'super'
http://www.skynews.com.au/video/program_richojones/2015/03/18/richo---jones-march-17.html
I agree you shouldn't be able to take lump sums from your concessionally treated super. I feel you should be able to take lump sums from your tax free component.
To say you can only take your tax free component as a pension, is the same as telling people they can't withdraw lump sums from the bank.
For example someone has $200k in the bank, he gets $6,000 interest tax free and most of his pension. He wants a holiday or a car or to upgrade his house, he just withdraws the money.
The same person puts the $200k into super after tax, your saying he can only withdraw it as a pension, sounds weird to me.
All l said;
Super should be used a vehicle that gives you dividends so that you shouldn't have to rely on the Government
If you take a lump sum payout, spend it all, then you are on the Government pension and back to square one
Yes, but I said all money in super hasn't been given a tax concession.
What is the difference between taking a lump out of your bank account, or taking a lump out of the tax free component of your super account.
Both enable the person to access the pension.
All of this hype, will only stop people putting voluntary contributions into super, a person can hold $500k outside of super and pay no tax.
Why would they put it in super, if they are going to be told how they can spend it.
Don't get me wrong, I'm pulling a self funded pension and had no thought of pulling any lumps of money out.
The current political talk about super, is making me have second thoughts, in case they do enact something stupid.
All money in super has been given a tax concession (unless your accountant is an idiot).
Yes, but I said all money in super hasn't been given a tax concession.
What is the difference between taking a lump out of your bank account, or taking a lump out of the tax free component of your super account.
Both enable the person to access the pension.
All of this hype, will only stop people putting voluntary contributions into super, a person can hold $500k outside of super and pay no tax.
Why would they put it in super, if they are going to be told how they can spend it.
Don't get me wrong, I'm pulling a self funded pension and had no thought of pulling any lumps of money out.
The current political talk about super, is making me have second thoughts, in case they do enact something stupid.
All money in super has been given a tax concession (unless your accountant is an idiot).
If the money was put in non concessionally, it hasn't been given a tax concession, its earnings may have.
That is exactly right. 70% of all my super contributions were put in non concessionally (after tax).
I agree with everything you say. Right now I am waiting for the May budget, if there is anything detrimental to my super savings then I will be pulling the lot out of one of my funds. Restricting people on what they can do with their money under rules they have abided by for the last 25 years will destroy the super industry.
At last some of the experts are telling the truth about super.
http://www.smh.com.au/business/the-...ugh-to-retire-in-comfort-20150419-1modsc.html
One of the better statements in the article says:
In the quest to ensure our super taxes are equitable, there's the potential for heavy collateral damage to be sustained to a large cohort of the people we're trying to help. These are the middle-income households hoping to accumulate sufficient nest eggs to mainly self-fund a reasonably comfortable retirement," said Mr Cooper, who chaired the super system review in 2010.
yet no one actually comes out and specifies what a self-funded reasonably comfortable retirement is.
If the $$ foregone in tax revenue are greater than the $$ saved via lower pension payments, and the revenue lose benefits a small wealthy percentage of the population, then how is the current overly generous system benefiting taxpayers, especially gen x and those that come after them?
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