2019-05-01 Money Australia

(Steven Felgate) #1
CALENDAR
OF EVENTS

Tuesday, May 7
Balance of trade


NAB business confidence


RBA interest rate decision


Thursday, May 16
Westpac consumer
confidence


Unemployment rate


Saturday, May 18
Federal election


First home scheme


gets a makeover


Earlier access to funds boosts opportunities for would-be buyers


A


mong all the budget and election noise in April,
federal parliament passed new laws that aim
to improve superannuation member outcomes,
including implementation of two recommendations
from the banking royal commission. One of the most
important was an amendment to the First Home
Super Saver Scheme (FHSSS).
The new legislation means individuals can enter a
contract to buy or build their first home at an earlier
time and still have access to the scheme rather than
waiting for funds to be released from their super.
They must have applied for and received a FHSSS
determination and applied for their super release
within 14 days of entering the contract.
What will come as a relief to some first home
buyers is that the new law is being retrospectively
applied from July 1, 2018. This means “individuals
who have a determination, made a valid request
for release from the commissioner and enter into a
contract to purchase or construct their home on or
after July 1, 2018 will satisfy the requirements of the
First Home Super Saver Scheme”.
Other conditions include: The price for the
purchase or construction of the premises is at
least equal to the amount requested for release;

the individual has occupied the premises, or
intends to occupy it as soon as practicable; and
the individual intends to occupy the premises
for at least six of the first 12 months that it is
practicable to occupy the premises.
Aside from the FHSSS, the legislation also
implements two recommendations of the banking
royal commission. It bans super funds from inducing
employers and extends civil penalties to super fund
trustees – in addition to civil and criminal penalties
for directors – for breach of their best-interests duty.
APRA’s regulatory powers have also been given a
boost to take preventive or corrective action where
a super fund is not acting in the best interests of
members. APRA also has more power over the
authorisation process for default MySuper products.
Finally, the government is making super funds
more accountable for how they spend members’
money through new expense reporting methods,
annual members’ meetings and an improved
portfolio disclosure regime.
These are sensible changes and hopefully they
restore more trust in banks and super funds and
align with parliament’s original intentions.
DARREN SNYDER

THE BUZZ


ON MY MIND


Protection against poverty


THIS MONTH


NEWS


&


VIEWS


J


ust as medical vaccinations
rely on immunity of the herd
to protect against diseases,
superannuation relies on the par-
ticipation of the herd to protect us
all from poverty in retirement.
Today, one in four people sits outside the super
system. That may be because they are working in
the gig-economy, are self-employed, are at home
caring for children or parents, or other reasons.
The percentage of the population covered by
super is in decline and unless we act now to
include these outliers many more people face
a bleak retirement, living in poverty.

The simple fact is that the more people in the
superannuation system, the better off we will all be,
for two reasons. First, increasing the level of private
savings for more people in retirement means more
will be self-funded for longer, thereby reducing pres-
sure on government budgets and enabling a decent
age pension for those who need it. Second, the
greater the number of people in the super system,
the greater the economies of scale, which benefits
us all in the form of lower fees, better services and
enhanced ability to manage liquidity requirements
for the retirement phase.
Martin Fahy, chief executive, Association of Super-
annuation Funds of Australia (ASFA).
Free download pdf