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... but when has our current Gov'mint started to listen to Business?Business is making fairly clear to the government how they feel about suggested tampering with Super.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/nat...cil-of-australia/story-fn59nsif-1226573057536
Business is making fairly clear to the government how they feel about suggested tampering with Super.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/nat...cil-of-australia/story-fn59nsif-1226573057536
They might not have to if Howard hadn't given away the farm in 2006.
Lets please keep this thread on topic with regards to superannuation and any future changes that are upcoming as opposed to political arguments as to who did what as we all know all politicians are as useless as each other
The way superannuation is currently working it's not really a cost effective way to reduce the financial burden of providing the aged pension.
Depending on the person's income you can be getting up to 75% of the current age pension as a tax discount, though this has been reduced a bit for those earning over 300K.
How making super tax free in the pension phase is supposed to help I still haven't read anything that makes financial sense to me. Allowing someone over age 60 to do a TRB along with salary sacrificing up to 25K is a GIANT tax loophole based on age based discrimination.
I'd suggest setting up super so that once you have a balance that would provide you with say 125% of the aged pension that you can only add fully taxed money into you account. Once a person isn't going to be a burden on tax payers, why should the government "care" any more? What is the point of keep income taxes higher to fund super tax breaks?
I'd argue that by cutting back on the amount of lost super tax it would easily allow the Government to provide biannual tax cuts, along with funding some infrastructure. Better yet, help devlop a retail corporate bond market in this country and let the SMSF sector help fund the productive investment of local companies
I'd suggest setting up super so that once you have a balance that would provide you with say 125% of the aged pension that you can only add fully taxed money into you account. Once a person isn't going to be a burden on tax payers, why should the government "care" any more? What is the point of keep income taxes higher to fund super tax breaks?
I've said before, if you want a steady, I'm not saying lavish, retirement in the current climate you need $2m.
Because the baby boomers are a large and very active voting bloc who want to be kept in the style they've become accustomed to?
$2m, are you joking? Have you actually worked out what the annuity on that would be, even at 3%? Over say 25 years it would be around $110k/annum. With no kids, house paid off, minimal living expenses, and no tax, you'd be living on $110k/annum disposable income. What do you consider lavish?
Talking glib is fine if you are an accountant, however some look beyond the crap.
http://www.superguide.com.au/boost-your-superannuation/crunching-the-numbers-a-2-million-retirement
What I consider lavish is M.P's getting $100k - 200k indexed for life tax free, gauranteed.lol
The examles given are for 5-7% returns and I'm talking about retiring at 55.
Currently term deposits are 4-4.5%
So, living to 100 at 5% (the most conservative calculation) gives an inflation indexed amount of $82k/annum in today's dollars. Same scenario, tax free, mortgage free, child free. Almost $1,600/week in disposable income for life.
So, living to 100 at 5% (the most conservative calculation) gives an inflation indexed amount of $82k/annum in today's dollars. Same scenario, tax free, mortgage free, child free. Almost $1,600/week in disposable income for life.
The four most disproportionately influential industries in Australia, they say, are superannuation, banking, mining and gambling.
Employers in Australia are required by law to remove 9 per cent of employees' pre-tax wages and deposit it in a superannuation account the employees can't touch until they retire. The industry has now persuaded the Labor government to gradually increase this to 12 per cent.
Thus the government has compelled almost all employees to become the customers of a particular industry.
The average management fee paid by Australians with a retail super fund is about 2 per cent of their fund balance each year.
So someone with a balance of $100,000 is paying a fee of about $2000 a year, or nearly $40 a week. This is more than the average Australian pays for electricity. After the compulsory contribution rate is raised to 12 per cent, these annual fees will have increased by a third.
To be fair, the government is working to oblige the super industry to give its captive customers a better deal. But it is encountering - and yielding to - much push-back from the industry.
I think you've lost the plot, salary sacrificing $25k is not going to give you a reasonable pension.
I've said before, if you want a steady, I'm not saying lavish, retirement in the current climate you need $2m.
The labor party are saying $800k are fat cats, just shows how they are out of touch with reality.
I think both parties would be much more realistic, if their pensions were taxed the same as everyone elses.
It is o.k backing one, but do either live by the rules they apply to others.
That is why I've said Allan Carpenter was the only politician that had morals. Guess what he was labor.lol
Guess how long he lasted. lol Not long
Just thought it relevant to share this here:
http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/the-four-industries-that-rule-australia-20130205-2dwew.html
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