http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/commentary/retirees-elect-a-gov... Quote:Retirees elect a government for a bigger house
* Mike Steketee
* From: The Australian
* March 20, 2010 12:00AM
HERE'S a question for an election year: what's government for, anyway?
To judge by the tenor of the public debate, it is to look after those who can look after themselves. To misquote John F. Kennedy, ask not what you can do for yourself, but what government can do for you.
People worry that their superannuation savings will not be adequate. Past generations expected to rely on the age pension in retirement, together with a few assets and, if lucky, a modest superannuation payout, often taken as a lump sum to clear the mortgage or go on a trip. Not any more. Just as we cannot live in a house that is not three times as large as that of our parents, we must have a retirement income just as large as our previous salary, and expect the government to provide this.
Discussion about superannuation typically is framed in terms of the "limits" set by government. The complaint is that the 9 per cent of income required to be taken in compulsory superannuation is too low.
So are the extra voluntary contributions that attract a tax concession. As Michael Dwyer, head of First State Super, said in last week's Inquirer cover story, many people, particularly women, want to catch up on their super contributions in later years. "They want to put as much money as they can into super because they know they have nowhere near enough to retire on, but they can't."
Here's a tip: they can. Dwyer's problem is that last year's budget reduced the voluntary contributions, taxed at only 15 per cent, that those under 50 can put into super from $50,000 a year to $25,000, and for those over 50 from $100,000 to $50,000. But there is nothing to stop people putting in as much additional money as they like. They just have to pay normal tax on it. It is not as though the limits on tax concessions are stingy. Who has a spare $25,000 to $50,000 a year lying around? The 5 per cent of taxpayers on incomes above $100,000 in 2005-06 made 24 per cent of the concessional contributions to superannuation, according to a paper released last year by the Henry tax review and, because they receive the biggest deductions, they sucked up 37 per cent of the total tax concessions.
Projecting forward to this financial year, Treasury estimates that those on incomes between $140,000 and $200,000 made an average contribution to superannuation of about 15 per cent -- that is, six percentage points above the compulsory level. And why wouldn't they when they have to pay only 15 per cent on the contributions rather than a marginal tax rate of 41.5 per cent or 46.5 per cent.
A common assumption is that these tax concessions pay for themselves through savings on the age pension. They don't, not by a long shot, thanks particularly to how far up the income scale the Howard government extended the pension. The proportion of people over 65 receiving the pension is expected to hardly fall from the present 80 per cent over the next 40 years. The only real change is that some will move from a full to a part-pension.
Paul Keating, who introduced compulsory superannuation when he was treasurer, this week called the halving of the cap on voluntary contributions that receive a tax break as a "dreadful decision", "shocking" and, in case his Radio National audience missed the point "bad, b-a-d, bad". His aspiration is to increase what he says is already the fourth largest pool of savings in the world, thereby reducing our reliance on overseas borrowings. It was the government's job, he said, to raise confidence in the superannuation system. Wasn't the tax benefit generous, asked Fran Kelly. "It's not generous enough." replied Keating, because to live as well in retirement as when working required 70 per cent of previous income and "what this system is giving is 40 per cent".
No it's not. Treasury calculates that, for a person who works for 35 years, the age pension and 9 per cent superannuation provide a so-called replacement rate -- retirement spending power compared with previous income -- of about 75 per cent for those who were on three quarters of average earnings and falling to 40 per cent on 2 times average earnings. But that only covers the minimum compulsory superannuation contribution. Adding the average additional contributions that employees make through salary sacrifice lifts the replacement rate slightly to 80 per cent for the first group, while for the second it leaps to 95 per cent.
Still, Keating demands that the compulsory superannuation level be raised from 9 per cent to 12 per cent. Australia has always borrowed heavily overseas to finance our capital requirements. It might be nice if we could rely more on domestic savings, but at what cost? Tax concessions for superannuation cost $24 billion last financial year, are projected to increase to $32bn in four year, and will keep rising steeply as the population ages.