Money Magazine Australia

Son’s super takes a hit

Anna and Graham want to help as ...

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QOur

22-year-old son attends university and has a part-time casual teacher’s aide job with a school during term time. He doesn’t get paid much and his super contributi­ons are paid to the fund that the school promotes. An account summary reveals that at February 5, 2016 he paid $300.92 into the super fund; net investment earnings were $4.78 and funds taken out (taxes, fees and premiums) were $154.52 – leaving him with the grand total of $151.18! I notice that a deduction of $37.53 was in respect of death/total and permanent disability insurance (which has now been cancelled).

Given that he is left with a pittance after the deduction of fees (and wanting to encourage him to start seriously saving for superannua­tion), could you suggest any other fund or way he can optimise his contributi­ons. He has two years remaining at university. We could help financiall­y if this would bring about a better outcome for him.

Anna and Graham, you have highlighte­d one of my main grievances with our compulsory super system: insurance for those who don’t need it.

I need to start by saying that most of us just don’t give insurance enough thought and we are generally underinsur­ed or not insured at all. But this is not a good reason to give young Aussies, often in lowpaid part-time work, a financial flogging through insurance that most just don’t need. In time to come I have no doubt he will need insurance, in particular death and income protection, but I fully understand why he has cancelled it for now.

This issue, though, is the super system, not the funds. In terms of the $4.78 in investment earnings, the period from July 1, 2015 to February 5, 2016 is as about as bad a period as you could pick. Growth or balanced-style funds, where most members’ money is invested, hold a lot of shares and in this period the market fell from around 5500 to 4800, so I am a bit surprised he made a profit.

What I would do is take a look at the earnings up to June 30 this year – the fund should have done well. Do compare it with other major funds; you may find the school’s recommende­d fund is doing well. If not, I agree with changing to another low-cost, good-performing fund.

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