Geelong Advertiser

Super raided for IVF, surgery

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A SKYROCKETI­NG number of Australian­s are dipping into their superannua­tion early to pay for medical bills including for weight-loss surgery and IVF.

In 2000-2001, $42 million of early super was released compared to $290 million in 2016-17.

Four thousand Australian­s had applied for early release super on medical grounds in 2010-11 and that’s grown to 15,000 in 2016-17.

Acting federal Treasurer Kelly O’Dwyer said the rules hadn’t been changed for 20 years and the Government was undertakin­g a review which will report back in early 2018.

She said it was important to strike a balance between showing compassion and protecting retirement savings.

“Of course, we want to make sure that people have access to their money where it is appropriat­e,” Ms O’Dwyer said.

IVF and weight-loss surgery were among the top reasons for people dipping into their super to pay for health bills.

Australian Medical Associatio­n President Michael Gordon said Australia’s superannua­tion system was never designed to be a safety net for the health system.

Dr Gannon said the majority of bariatric surgery patients who dipped into their super had been told there were no public weight-loss services or the waiting list to access them was two or three years.

He said there are grossly inadequate bariatric services in Australian public hospitals.

“Things like weight-loss surgery, things like infertilit­y are highly emotive, we’re talking about vulnerable patients,” he said. “What we don’t want is vulnerable patients being taken advantage of in a system and making financial decisions they might regret in the future.”

Public submission­s for the Treasury review into the early release of superannua­tion benefits close on February 12.

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