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- 14 February 2005
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Interesting reading today, that there is a suggestion the Government should take over the administration of compulsory super, we talked about this on the forum years ago.
Funny how history repeats, we said it would, RIP Julia.
How do you draw that conclusion?Well to be honest if your super balance is low enough to qualify you as a pensioner then you shouldn't be playing around with an SMSF. The running costs will kill your profits.
If you have $1m in super you won't qualify for the pension.
You said earlier: "Most SMSF people will end up on the pension"
To be in that position your balance would have to be less than say... $250K yeah? $1,500 p/a is too much when you can simply take the money out tax free and invest outside of super instead.
My thought is this makes Australian shares a less attractive asset to hold.
That being so, logical outcome is the ASX ends up lower than it otherwise would have been. That’s an issue for investors no matter what their tax situation.
Do you have any idea, how much pension money is in the market? and how much effect it will have if it's removed?Apparently we have the only fully-refundable dividend imputation system in the world? If that's all that's holding the ASX up Australian shares are in bigger trouble than I thought. Maybe without the pressure from retirees to pump out so much fully franked divis Australian companies might be inclined to reinvest more of their profits into growing their business and building infrustructure for the future?
Do you have any idea, how much pension money is in the market? and how much effect it will have if it's removed?
Well the simple answer is most other countries that have a welfare system like ours, have a funded pension system, which we had before the Government put it into consolidated revenue and spent it.No, I gather it's a hell of a lot. But other countries don't need cash refunds of imputation credits to those paying no tax, so why do we? Why would the money be removed and if it was removed where would it then be invested?
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