The Citizen (Gauteng)

Don’t risk your future

SELF-SABOTAGE: CASHING OUT A PENSION FUND PREMATUREL­Y IS A NO-NO

- Jeane e Marais

Never exchange well-being tomorrow for instant gratificat­ion today.

Cashing out your pension fund every time you change jobs may seem like a quick cashflow fix in the moment, but it’s self-sabotage. Every time you borrow from the future, you jeopardise your financial wellness beyond retirement.

But withdrawin­g from your retirement savings prematurel­y not only reduces the tax-free lump sum you would get at retirement age, but also increases the tax rate for the money that you get when you eventually retire.

For example, if you decide to change jobs and cash out your pension fund with the current value of R500 000, you would get the first R25 000 tax-free and then pay 18% on the difference. Eighteen percent on R475 000 is R85 500, leaving R414 500.

Some years later, you withdraw an additional R550 000 and end up paying the taxman R139 500, bringing the total paid to the SA Revenue Service to R225 000.

Had you chosen to only cash in at retirement age, your first R500 000 would be tax free, but because you withdrew before retirement, you effectivel­y lose most of such exemption due to the aggregatio­n. You would only have to pay R130 500 in tax. That is a whole R94 500 difference!

In essence, the more you cash out your pension fund, the more tax you will pay for each withdrawal, leaving you with less and less money when you retire.

Many people today are over-indebted and may feel that withdrawin­g their pension funds early to settle debt will remedy the situation. But this does not deal with the reason they are in so much debt to begin with – their lifestyle.

Until you develop a healthy relationsh­ip with money, you will always fall victim to debt. It all boils down to putting a budget together and sticking to it. When you choose to use your retirement money to repay your debt, you are opting for the easy way out instead of addressing the real problem of living beyond your means.

In this case, chances are that in five years’ time, you will be faced with the same predicamen­t.

Only 6% of South Africans can afford a comfortabl­e retirement. This is very concerning because it means the vast majority of the population will have to rely on government grants or even family members for financial support at retirement.

Another important point to remember is that your healthcare needs change as you grow older and not having enough money saved when you retire means you will have to make other means to cover those costs.

The basic reasoning behind saving for retirement is to have some security when you no longer have a regular source of income.

You spend your whole working life saving for the future because you want to maintain a certain lifestyle at retirement, keeping in mind that the cost of living is always on the rise.

Never sabotage your well-being tomorrow for the sake of instant gratificat­ion today.

Jeanette Marais is the CEO of Momentum Investment­s

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