Mercury (Hobart)

How review into retirement could affect you

- ANTHONY KEANE

RETIREES are likely to face fresh rule changes affecting their finances as the Federal Government ramps up its review into retirement incomes.

Superannua­tion, the age pension, savings and home ownership are being examined in the review, with its independen­t panel required to hand a final report to the government by June next year.

When announcing the review in September, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg avoided a political firestorm by ruling out including the family home in the age pension assets test. However, he sparked a separate storm last week by calling for people in their mid-to-late 60s to work longer and retrain – earning a barrage of criticism from Baby Boomers.

Finance specialist­s say the retirement incomes review could lead to tougher age pension access rules, higher taxes for superannua­tion, an increase in the super access age and freezing employer super contributi­ons at 10 per cent.

The age pension currently pays a maximum of $933.40 per fortnight to a single or $1407 a fortnight to a couple.

MBA Financial Strategist­s director Darren James said the new review had the right intent, “ensuring Australian­s can afford to retire and we don’t have an issue like Greece with a number of people retiring early and being unfunded”. “Look at the demographi­cs – we have an ageing population and can’t sustain paying an age pension the way it is under the current system,” he said.

Mr James urged pre-retirees to start planning sooner. “If you wait for government change but do nothing you could be waiting a long time,” he said.

Superannua­tion changes made in recent years have reduced the amount of contributi­ons people can put in annually, and retirees could be in for more of the same.

“We think the age at which you can access super is probably going to rise,” Mr James said. This would follow the age pension’s qualificat­ion age rising to 67 by 2023.

Super can currently be accessed from age 60 by most Australian­s, although some can still get it between 55 and 59.

Marinis Financial Group managing director Theo Marinis said the review would deliver “more noise, that’s all”.

“They always have reviews, but what sort of review of retirement income are you going to have if they don’t factor in your home?” he said.

“Why should someone have a $3 million home and still get Centrelink but someone with a more modest home gets nothing?”

Mr Marinis said some recent changes to superannua­tion had undermined previous changes and created more complexity.

“Despite the morons in Canberra, political and bureaucrat­ic, the system is good – we have gone from fourth best back to third best in the world,” he said.

Mr James said people needed to hedge their bets and not have all their financial eggs in the super basket. “With the stroke of a pen the government can change the rules,” he said.

 ??  ?? UNSUSTAINA­BLE: MBA Financial Strategist­s director Darren James.
UNSUSTAINA­BLE: MBA Financial Strategist­s director Darren James.

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