Lost, unpaid and eroded superannuation will be reunited with workers under a massive superannuation package announced in the federal budget – which will also try to kick our addiction to lump sum payouts in retirement.
Fewer bosses will get away with stealing retirement payments from their workers and less super will be eaten up by unnecessary and excessive fees, if the government’s plan works.
The Protecting Your Super Package, announced in Tuesday’s budget, will cap passive fees, hunt down unpaid super, ban exit fees, and help workers find accounts they had long forgotten about.
Finance Services Minister Kelly O’Dwyer said the changes would be of special help for women, who often have “interrupted work patterns and low incomes”.
Interestingly, hidden deep in the budget, is the beginnings of an attempt to coax workers to make their superannuation last longer by drawing incomes from it, rather than taking it all in a lump sum in retirement, as most do now.
But the centrepiece of the package was undoubtedly the measures on unpaid super. After years of inaction and a growing chorus of dismay from workers, the Labor party and industry, comes the stunning admission from the government that the problem of unpaid super is rife.
Budget 2018: Forget Tax Cuts, This Is a Superannuation Bonanza
By Jackson Stiles
Lost, unpaid and eroded superannuation will be reunited with workers under a massive superannuation package announced in the federal budget – which will also try to kick our addiction to lump sum payouts in retirement.
Fewer bosses will get away with stealing retirement payments from their workers and less super will be eaten up by unnecessary and excessive fees, if the government’s plan works.
The Protecting Your Super Package, announced in Tuesday’s budget, will cap passive fees, hunt down unpaid super, ban exit fees, and help workers find accounts they had long forgotten about.
Finance Services Minister Kelly O’Dwyer said the changes would be of special help for women, who often have “interrupted work patterns and low incomes”.
Interestingly, hidden deep in the budget, is the beginnings of an attempt to coax workers to make their superannuation last longer by drawing incomes from it, rather than taking it all in a lump sum in retirement, as most do now.
But the centrepiece of the package was undoubtedly the measures on unpaid super. After years of inaction and a growing chorus of dismay from workers, the Labor party and industry, comes the stunning admission from the government that the problem of unpaid super is rife.
Lost, unpaid and eroded superannuation will be reunited with workers under a massive superannuation package announced in the federal budget – which will also try to kick our addiction to lump sum payouts in retirement.
Fewer bosses will get away with stealing retirement payments from their workers and less super will be eaten up by unnecessary and excessive fees, if the government’s plan works.
The Protecting Your Super Package, announced in Tuesday’s budget, will cap passive fees, hunt down unpaid super, ban exit fees, and help workers find accounts they had long forgotten about.
Finance Services Minister Kelly O’Dwyer said the changes would be of special help for women, who often have “interrupted work patterns and low incomes”.
Interestingly, hidden deep in the budget, is the beginnings of an attempt to coax workers to make their superannuation last longer by drawing incomes from it, rather than taking it all in a lump sum in retirement, as most do now.
But the centrepiece of the package was undoubtedly the measures on unpaid super. After years of inaction and a growing chorus of dismay from workers, the Labor party and industry, comes the stunning admission from the government that the problem of unpaid super is rife.