Category: Newspaper/Blog Articles/Hansard

Labor likely to back super changes but other legislation struggles

Australian Financial Review

6 November 2016

Phillip Coorey

The Turnbull government is on track for a sorely needed win in Parliament with Labor poised to back its revamped set of changes to superannuation that put a lifetime cap on contributions and limits on retirement accounts.

With just three weeks of Parliament left this year and other government measures shrouded in uncertainty, the  super changes, which clamp down on tax concessions and are designed to deliver a net $3 billion saving to the budget over four years, looks set to pass.

This would ensure the changes would come into effect, as originally intended, by July 1, 2017.

After crunching a deal last month with the backbench, which opposed a $500,000 lifetime cap on non-concessional contributions, the government will put the super legislation to Parliament the week after next with the aim of passing it during what will be the final sitting fortnight of the year.

Although Labor must approve the legislation through normal channels – shadow cabinet followed by caucus – senior opposition sources said it was unlikely there would be any significant objection although some minor changes may be demanded.

Labor promised before the election to deliver the same net saving to the budget with its own superannuation policy, and because some of the changes the government made to appease the backbench were also similar to those demanded by the opposition.

To win support of the backbench, the government dumped plans for a $500,000 cap backdated to 2007. Instead there will be a yearly cap of $100,000 on non-concessional contributions, down from the current $180,000-a-year cap, until the $1.6 million cap on super retirement accounts, also one of the new measures, is reached.

To recoup lost revenue, the government scrapped a proposal to remove restrictions such as minimum work requirements on people aged between 65 and 74 wishing to make voluntary contributions to their super. It also delayed by a year – from July 1, 2017 to July 1, 2018 – plans to allow people with interrupted work patterns to roll over unused concessional contributions form the previous year. Other elements of the super package include a $25,000 annual limit in concessional contributions.

On Monday, Parliament resumes for a week, has a week off, and then sits for the final fortnight starting on Monday, November 21.

This week, the Senate will pass budget appropriation bills and vote on the legislation to establish a same-sex marriage plebiscite on February 11. The plebiscite is headed for defeat but there may be some procedural jiggery-pokery in the Senate by Labor and the Greens. In order to exploit the numbers in the Senate caused by the resignation of Bob Day and the abstention from voting of One Nation’s Rod Culleton, there is talk of defeating the plebiscite and then bringing on a vote to legalise same-sex marriage. However, if this were to happen, the legislation would still need to pass the lower house and the numbers are not there.

The government will also attempt to put through both Houses its legislation to place a lifetime ban on entry to Australia for asylum seekers who arrived by boat after July 2013.

The move is a precursor to an as yet undisclosed plan to resettle those on Manus Island and Nauru in third countries.

On Sunday, Opposition Leader Bill Shorten again said that while Labor would support stopping the people from settling in Australia, it was “ludicrous” to ban them ever coming here, even as a tourist many years down the track.

Mr Shorten also signalled that Labor would back a proposal by Tasmanian senator Jacqui Lambie to force the government to further water down its backpacker tax. Originally, the plan was to place a 32.5 per cent tax on every dollar earned by seasonal labourers.

After a revolt by the backbench and sectoral interests, the government dropped the tax rate to 19 per cent. But Treasury says this will have the same deterrent effect on seasonal labour as 32 per cent.  Senator Lambie is proposing 10.5 per cent, the same as New Zealand.

“We are open to it,” Mr Shorten told the ABC’s Insiders program.

What Labor’s super changes mean for high-income earners

Australian Financial Review

8 November 2016

Joanna Mather

As many as half a million higher-income earners could be worse off under superannuation tax plans announced by Labor.

Labor is proposing two major changes, one of which involves lowering the point at which superannuation contributions are taxed at 30 per cent rather than 15 per cent.

Parliamentary Budget Office figures show less than 4 per cent of the nation’s 12.7 million taxpayers would be affected by this change.

The second proposed change is a lower cap on post-tax contributions to $75,000 a year, with a maximum carry forward over three years of $225,000. About 30,000, or 0.2 per cent, make post-tax contributions of between $50,000 and $99,999 a year, and so might fall into this category.

Pitcher Partners partner Charlie Viola said both measures served to limit the amount of money that older taxpayers could put away in super.

“When you get older, suddenly the kids are gone, you have more surplus income and generally you will consider downsizing your home, or selling a small business,” he said.

“These are things that aren’t possible earlier in life.

“The stringent tightening of caps doesn’t hurt just the wealthy, it hurts normal working Australians who have invested money into their home and business who intended on making bigger contributions closer to retirement.”

Lifetime limit

At present, anybody earning more than $300,000 pays 30 per cent tax on their super contributions.

In this year’s budget the government announced it would lower the threshold to $250,000, to take effect from July 1, 2017.

But Labor says that should be dropped further to $200,000.

After a brawl with backbenchers, the government scrapped its original proposal for a $500,000 lifetime limit on after-tax contributions, backdated to 2007.

The measure was replaced with an annual limit of $100,000. The better off were winners in that change.

Moreover, there is still a chance to stash money in the tax-advantaged super environment before the change kicks in.

The existing $180,000 annual non-concessional cap will remain in place until next June, as will the bring-forward rule allowing up to $540,000.

Labor wants the threshold lowered to $75,000 a year.

Precise figures for how many people would be affected by this measure were not released.

However, PBO says 0.2 per cent of taxpayers make contributions of between $50,000 and $99,999 a year.

Structural features

Their average taxable income is $97,000 a year and their median superannuation balance is $439,000.

Meanwhile, analysis by the Australian National University has found the government’s super policies are only “very marginally beneficial to women”.

The same goes for Labor’s most recent initiatives, according to the ANU’s Tax and Transfer Policy Institute

“There are structural features of superannuation tax concessions which make the whole system very beneficial to men, particularly upper-income men,” the institute says in a submission to the government on the third and final tranche of draft legislation.

“Having now had the opportunity to review the three tranches of legislation, it is apparent that the superannuation package does very little to address the gender inequities in the superannuation system.”

The institute’s director, Professor Miranda Stewart, said the low income super tax offset was of most assistance to women.

“One specific reform measure … that would benefit women would be to require superannuation contributions on parental leave,” she said.

Labor’s superannuation plan: Voters deserved to hear about it before July 2

The Australian

8 November 2016

David Crowe | Political correspondent | Canberra | @CroweDM

Bill Shorten and his shadow cabinet have finally decided to squeeze $4.5 billion in extra tax revenue from superannuation over the next four years. It is a bold plan. So bold, in fact, that Shorten could not be straight with Australians about it when he was seeking their votes.

Labor has confirmed a policy that will collect $1.5bn more in super taxes than the government. This is three times the size of the government’s backpacker tax but gets a fraction of the attention.

You will not hear this in all the cries over “chaos” in politics, but Labor has taken six months to make up its mind on this policy. It has repeatedly promised to reveal its hand but hidden the details at every stage.

Labor has an excuse for taking its time. Malcolm Turnbull and Scott Morrison were forced to rewrite some of their own policy after a backlash from the Liberal Party base, making the government’s plan a moving target.

Even so, what Shorten did on super reveals the same flaws he sees in Turnbull. He dithered. He waffled. He promised one thing and delivered another.

Scott Morrison outlined the super changes on budget day, May 3. The package raised taxes by about $6 billion over four years but used half of this to pay for sweeteners such as top-up for low-income workers, catch-up contributions for those who return to the workforce and tax-deductibility for some contributions. The overall package added $3bn to the bottom line.

Shorten walked both sides of the street throughout the election campaign. He formed a unity ticket with the government’s conservative critics to attack the retrospectivity of one measure yet he adopted the overall tax increase at the same time. His policy platform included the $3bn in extra revenue.

Shorten was sometimes challenged on this but obviously not challenged enough. Five days out from the election, he was asked why he could embrace the saving without telling voters what his actual policy was.

“Are you planning some other hit to super that we don’t know about?” a journalist asked.

Shorten’s response was political waffle. “We will revisit these measures to see their workability, to fully understand if they can actually be done,” he said.

He and his colleagues made no mention of a policy that would keep more of the tax revenue and cancel the sweeteners.

This is what Labor assistant treasury spokesman Andrew Leigh said on June 27: “So we’ve committed, if we win office, to using the resources of Treasury, consulting quickly on that, coming up with a measure which achieves the same impact on the budget bottom line, but ideally without the retrospectivity of the government’s changes.”

That’s right. “The same impact on the budget bottom line.” That is what the Labor election platform said and what Labor frontbenchers said.

Labor finance spokesman Jim Chalmers promised to reveal the details before election day and never suggested the policy would raise so much more revenue. “People will know by the time they go into the polling booth where we stand on superannuation,” he said on May 26. That never happened.

Looked at over two years, the bidding war on super is obvious. Chris Bowen moved first in April 2015 with a plan to raise taxes on the very biggest super funds. Abbott rejected this. Turnbull revived the idea after taking power and then out-bid Labor with a bigger tax increase. Shorten played for time but eventually went for an even bigger hit.

The scale of the change is in the numbers. Bowen’s first plan in early 2015 raised $14.3bn over a decade. The Labor plan decided this week raises $32.6bn.

The revenue gain mostly comes from embracing all the tax increases put forward by the government but cancelling two sweeteners – the catch-up concessional contributions and the tax deductibility for personal superannuation contributions.

This highlights a constant dynamic between the major parties. The Coalition could only move when Labor gave it cover. Labor’s instinct was to bank a Coalition tax increase and raise it. Both sides calculated they could survive the electoral blowback. On this issue, the Coalition took the bigger political risk.

Labor has played the politics of superannuation brilliantly. It denounced a tax increase while embracing it and then expanding it. Voters deserved to hear before July 2 what Shorten has revealed today.

Wealthy retirees face higher tax on pension transfers

Australian Financial Review

4 November 2016

Sally Patten

Wealthy retirees face higher annual tax bills because of a little understood methodology that will be used to adjust for inflation the proposed $1.6 million ceiling on tax-free superannuation pensions.

In addition to paying more tax, the methodology could require self-managed fund trustees to seek professional help to determine their individual pension transfer cap while its implementation will cost pooled super funds tens of millions of dollars.

The proposed methodology will affect people who have $1.6 million in the pension phase and people whose pension balance will grow beyond that level in the future.

The government said the decision to apply a proportional indexation of the pension transfer limit would prevent wealthy superannuants from gaining an unfair advantage, but super funds and financial planners said the planned system was overly complex and will be difficult to administer.

“The proportionate approach to indexing the transfer balance cap is complex and confusing,” said Jordan George, head of policy at the SMSF Association, which represents financial advisers and accountants who service self-managed super schemes.

“We believe that the small revenue benefit to government of restricting future transfers under a higher indexed cap is outweighed by the complex laws required.”

“It is likely most people will need assistance of an accountant or a financial adviser licensed to provide tax advice to assist them with maximising any future transfers under a higher indexed cap and to ensure they do not breach the transfer balance cap rules,” Mr George argued.

The Australian Institute of Superannuation Trustees is also concerned. “The transfer balance cap should be simple. A cap becomes a cap. Is the complexity worth it? The number of people who will be affected is tiny,” said David Haynes, executive manager of policy and research at the AIST.

“It just adds another level of complexity and makes it harder for self-managed fund members to track everything,” said Nerida Cole, head of financial advisory at Dixon Advisory. But Treasurer Scott Morrison insisted the proportional methodology was fair.

“Allowing individuals who have already transferred $1.6 million to transfer further $100,000 lump sums into a retirement account, well after they have retired, would not be consistent with the objective of superannuation,” a spokesperson for Mr Morrison said.

“Whilst superannuants and the superannuation industry would no doubt like to have additional sums in tax-free retirement accounts to improve rates of return, the government has no such plans to allow this,” the spokesperson added.

Under a fractional indexation system, for people who do not transfer the full $1.6 million into a super pension in the first instance, the percentage of the limit that they have not used will be indexed to CPI. The cap will rise in increments of $100,000.

If a retiree transfers $1.2 million into a pension account in July next year, when the rules are due to be enforced, they will retain the right to contribute another $400,000, or 25 per cent of $1.6 million, at some future date. If by the time they contribute a second tranche the limit has risen to $1.7 million, they will be able to contribute $400,000, plus 25 per cent of the $100,000 incremental rise. In other words, they will be able to inject another $425,000 into a tax free pension.

A retiree who injects $1.6 million into a super pension in the first instance will have used up 100 per cent of their pension transfer cap and will not be able to make any additional top up when the cap is raised to $1.7 million.

The SMSF Association estimates that retirees who are unable to contribute any more money to their super pension could end up paying more than $1000 a year in tax beyond what they otherwise would, depending on the level of investment returns.

It is expected that the Tax Office will be able to inform retirees the size of their personal transfer balance.

“Whether the available transfer balance cap space is calculated on a proportionate or absolute basis makes no difference to the administrative complexity, because the ATO, not superannuation providers, will still need to calculate the available cap space for an individual across all superannuation accounts,” Mr Morrison’s spokesperson said.

But Ms Cole anticipated that self-managed super fund members, who are responsible for their own retirement savings, would need to track all contributions in the first few years until the ATO had all the necessary data. “For the first few years, most people will get help [from a professional adviser] and the first time they want to access the higher index limit they might need help,” Ms Cole said.

The AIST estimates that the new system will cost super funds almost $90 million to implement. The government said the ATO had been allocated $4.4 million to implement the policy.

Super too complex: Costello

The Australian

6 November 2016

Damon Kitney | Victorian Business Editor | Melbourne | @DamonKitney

Future Fund chairman and former federal treasurer Peter Costello says Australians are right to baulk at making voluntary contributions to their superannuation because of the extreme complexity that now plagues the nation’s retirement savings system.

Almost two months after the government released its revised super reform package for public consultation, Mr Costello said he was worried about the complexity of the system.

“With growing complexity, extreme complexity, people will shy away from (the super system). And I think they are right to shy away from it because you never know what the rules will be,’’ he said.

In an interview with The Australian following a private breakfast address in Melbourne hosted by Hamilton Wealth Management, Mr Costello also warned about the dangers for global trade of a Trump or Clinton presidency in the US and played down the move by the Future Fund to reduce its property exposure during the September quarter.

Mr Costello, who also chairs Nine Network owner Nine Entertainment, said the opposition of both Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton to the Trans-Pacific Partnership — the latter despite her huge support for the trade pact when she was previously US secretary of state — was concerning for Australia.

He reiterated that the prospect of Australia being downgraded by global credit ratings agencies because of the commonwealth budget deficit should “galvanise’’ the nation to change its ways.

“I think the prospect of a downgrade can and should be used to galvanise public opinion to know that international people outside Australia are registering concern about our financial position,” he said. “This should be taken as a message to the public that we need to change our ways.”

In July, two of the three global ratings agencies warned that the prospect of a deadlocked parliament stymieing budget savings put the nation’s AAA credit rating in danger.

Australia’s credit rating was downgraded twice in the 1980s, before being restored to AAA again by Moody’s in 2002 and Standard & Poor’s in 2003 on the back of a string of budget surpluses during the Howard government when Mr Costello was treasurer.

In an effort to reduce the budget deficit, the government has cracked down on super tax concessions to ensure they are not used to build tax-incentivised ­estate planning vehicles for wealthy Australians.

Instead it wants to support more Australians maximising their super balances in retirement.

On the complexity in the super system and voluntary contributions, he said: “In the voluntary sector … I think people will take the view that you should be much, much more cautious … This might be what the government wants, we don’t know.”

In August the nation’s biggest wealth manager AMP claimed the government’s proposed super shake-up was a major factor in weak retail and corporate super platform cashflows.

The government has moved to water down the proposed changes in its latest reform package with the contribution caps and the reforms to the non-concessional cap less comprehensive than the changes put forward in the May budget.

But Treasurer Scott Morrison has claimed the revised package would save the budget $180 million over the next four years and $670m in the medium-term.

During the three months to September 30, the Future Fund scaled back its exposure to property as it recorded a 1.5 per cent return, pushing its funds above $124bn.

The breakdown of its asset allocation at the end of the quarter showed the Future Fund’s share of property assets fell 0.5 percentage points to 6.5 per cent.

But Mr Costello cautioned against reading too much into the change. “Its gone from 7 per cent to 6.5 per cent. It is true it has moved but I wouldn’t read too much into it,’’ he said. “I wouldn’t see that as a major tilt.’’

The Future Fund has asked the government to consider lowering the inaugural CPI plus 4.5 per cent to 5.5 per cent real investment target for the fund, given bond markets have been signalling prolonged subdued returns.

Mr Costello declined to comment on the progress of negotiations with the government, but noted that for several years the risk-free rate (of bonds) had been closer to 2 per cent.

“The fact that 10-year bonds are closer to that number and have been for several years, and around the world there are other sovereigns that are even less,” he said.

“It tells you that 7 per cent nominal historically has changed.

“The government has just started issuing 30-year bonds at close to 3 per cent. The long-term risk-free rate of return is different now to what it was historically. There is no reason to think it is going to go back to the historic number any time soon.’’

After the Future Fund was a key player in the $9.7bn purchase of a lease of the Port of Melbourne in a consortium with QIC and Chinese sovereign wealth fund CIC Capital, Mr Costello said infrastructure was “a good asset’’.

“If we can find an asset which will give us a reliable return, we are very interested,’’ he said. But he rejected suggestions the Future Fund should be investing more in rural property amid a push by Chinese and other offshore investors to acquire local farming land.

Earlier this year Mr Morrison rejected a Chinese bid for the Kidman family’s cattle assets.

They were subsequently snapped up by mining magnate Gina Rinehart.

“The Future Fund is told by the government that it has to get a return 5 per cent real, 7 per cent nominal. If investment opportunities can’t give us those returns, we can’t invest in them,’’ Mr Costello said.

SMSFOA Members’ Newsletter – 161027

SMSFOA Members’ Newsletter
# 15/2016 27 October 2016
In this newsletter:

  • Annual general meeting – 16 November
  • SMSF Owners’ Chairman lambasts Government over super changes
  • Tranche 3 of the draft legislation is released
  • Complexity will increase compliance costs

Disclaimer: The observations made in this newsletter are based on our reading of complex draft legislation and what we think it means. It will be some time before the draft legislation becomes law and there may be changes. SMSF Owners does not give investment advice.

Annual General Meeting
SMSF Owners’ Alliance Limited will hold its 2015-16 Annual General Meeting at:
4pm, Wednesday 16 November
Level 4 Boardroom
37 Bligh Street
Sydney NSW 2000
All members are invited to attend, however only Principal Members are entitled to vote.
After the formal meeting, there will be a general discussion about the future direction of SMSF Owners.
If you’d like to come along, please email info@smsfoa.org.au and let us know.

Our Chairman hammers the Government on superannuation changes
In his annual review, SMSF Owners’ Chairman, Bruce Foy, strongly criticises the Government for the complex and retrospective changes it is making to superannuation and the way it has gone about it with minimal consultation. Mr Foy says:
“What Morrison has done is to give himself and every following Treasurer a licence to claw back our retirement savings to make up for over-spending by government. We can be sure the current round of changes won’t be the last. The temptation for governments that can’t run a surplus budget, or at least a balanced one, will be to dip into the superannuation lolly jar again and again.”

And he questioned the Treasurer’s motivation:

“A disturbing aspect of Morrison’s changes is that they directly link superannuation to the state of the budget. At least he made no secret of his intention saying ‘above all else, this contributes to getting the budget back into balance’.

It strikes us as very poor economics to use savings to meet recurrent spending on welfare and other government programs rather than invest them to produce reliable income in retirement.

From when he became Treasurer, Morrison has often stated that superannuation is not for tax minimisation or estate planning. He has included this phrase in each tranche of the draft legislation. This is not appropriate in our view.

There is nothing wrong in maximising your savings by taking advantage of concessions to the extent allowed by the law. In fact this is precisely the intent of superannuation. It is wrong to imply that people who do so are tax dodgers.

Nor is there anything wrong in maximising your savings so you can have confidence that you will have enough to last through a comfortable and hopefully lengthy retirement. Where is the line to be drawn between prudent saving for an independent retirement and estate planning?”

You can read the full version of the Chairman’s Review here: https://www.smsfoa.org.au/media-release/news-updates.html

Government forces the pace on new super laws

The Government is pressing ahead with its swag of new superannuation legislation in spite of widespread concern about its complexity and retrospective effect.

We expect legislation to be introduced to Parliament in the final sitting for the year starting 7 November and passed before the Parliament rises in December.

The Opposition has not yet stated its position on the legislation. It is waiting to see the Bills in their final form. However, even in the unlikely event that Labor opposes the legislation outright we expect the Government will be able to push the legislation through both the House of Representatives and the Senate with the support of the Greens, Xenophon and some independents.

With passage of the changes fairly certain, the challenge now for SMSF owners and their advisers is to understand how the new laws will work in practice and prepare for their introduction from 1 July 2017.
SMSF trustees will need to make careful decisions about the disposition of their superannuation assets before the end of this financial year.

All on the table now – we hope
The Government has now released three tranches of draft legislation, running to hundreds of pages of new tax law.

Tranche 1 dealt with the objective of superannuation – we argued the proposed purpose “to substitute for and supplement the age pension” was too limited and gave superannuation just a supporting role for the age pension rather than making it the central pillar of an effective and adequate retirement incomes system. We noted the limited objective lacked ambition and set no performance target for retirement savings

Tranche 2 dealt with the new $1.6 million transfer balance cap to apply from 1 July 2017 – we argued the cap was retrospective and, any case, too low. Independent research by Dr Ron Bewley showed the cap should be at least twice as high to provide an adequate income throughout retirement. We also proposed a 12-month period to bed down complex new legislation before penalties for exceeding the transfer balance cap apply.

Tranche 3 dealt with the new, lower non-concessional contributions rules that will replace the Government’s earlier proposal to limit total non-concessional contributions to $500,000 – we argued the transitional rules were complicated and unnecessary.

For each tranche, the Government has allowed just a few working days for organisations like SMSF Owners to digest the changes and make submissions which, as a result, have been necessarily brief. Rushing changes to such a complex system as superannuation risks mistakes being made and unintended consequences.

The full suite – three tranches – of draft superannuation legislation can be found here: http://www.treasury.gov.au/ConsultationsandReviews/Consultations

Our submissions in response to each tranche can be found here:
https://www.smsfoa.org.au/joomla.html

There’s more to the changes than first meets the eye
The draft legislation introduces not just one new superannuation balance cap, but two. It makes not just one retrospective change to the way superannuation is taxed, but two.

Two balance caps
The main focus has been on the “transfer balance cap” which applies from 1 July 2017. On that date, you can have only $1.6 million in your tax-free retirement pension account. Any excess must be transferred to an accumulation account on which the earnings are taxed.
The draft legislation revealed that a second $1.6 million cap, called the “general transfer balance cap”, will also apply to all of your superannuation accounts (many people have multiple accounts – in a self-managed fund and in mainstream superannuation funds and perhaps defined benefit schemes as well). Once you have reached the general $1.6 million cap, you can make no further non-concessional contributions.

Two tax changes
Earnings on the assets held in an accumulation account in retirement phase will be subject to a new 15% tax. Prior to the legislation taking effect, earnings on superannuation funds in the pension phase have been tax free.

The second tax change kicks in if you transfer assets from your pension account to an accumulation account to meet the $1.6 million transfer balance cap. In the accumulation fund, those assets again become liable for capital gains tax. You will be liable to capital gains tax of 15% if the asset has been held for less than one year and 10% if held for more than a year.

Prior to the legislation, capital gains tax did not apply in the pension phase.
Sensibly, the Government will allow you to reset the cost base of the assets from 1 July 2017 but that expires after 10 years when the cost base of the assets will revert to their original value. For assets that have been held for many years, the capital gains are likely to be significant and even a 10% tax on them will be substantial.

New non-concessional contribution limits
The third tranche of draft legislation sets out transitional arrangements for the change from the present system where non-concessional contributions of $180,000 a year can be rolled forward for three years.

Under the new arrangements, the annual non-concessional limit will be reduced to $100,000 and it can still be rolled forward for up to three years.

However, the transitional arrangements will limit the non-concessional contributions and bring forward periods that can be made if you are nearing the $1.6 million total superannuation balance cap. If you have $1.6 million or more in your superannuation by 1 July 2017, no further non-concessional contributions can be made.

This table taken from the Explanatory Memorandum for tranche three summarises how it will work:

super-table

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Heffron Super News has published a useful summary of the third tranche explaining the new non-concessional contribution rules which can be found here:
http://cdn.heffron.com.au/forms/132%20-%202016%2010%20-%20Changes%20to%20NCC.pdf

More complication
The $1.6 million transfer balance cap will be indexed in $100,000 increments based on the Consumer Price Index.

First, the indexation should be based on wages (AWOTE) rather than CPI. Superannuation is an outcome of payment for work and it would be more appropriate to use AWOTE as the indexation factor. AWOTE generally grows faster than CPI so linking the transfer balance cap to consumer prices instead will slow down increases in the transfer balance cap which may become significant over time.
Second, in another unnecessary complication, the indexation will not apply automatically to the full $1.6 million transfer balance cap. It will apply to the unused proportion of the cap.

The Government explains:
Proportional indexation is intended to hold constant the proportion of an individual’s used and unused cap space as their personal cap increases. This is worked out by finding the individual’s highest transfer balance, comparing it to their personal transfer balance cap on that day and expressing the unused cap as a percentage. Once a proportion of cap space is utilised, it is not subject to indexation, even if the individual subsequently removes capital from their retirement phase.” – second tranche Explanatory Memorandum.

The Government gives an example of how it will work for Amy:

amysuper

However, things get a bit more complicated for Nina:
ninasuper

ninasuper2
Good luck Nina!

It would be simpler to just apply the new non-concessional rules from 1 July 2017 though at some cost to budget revenue.

All this complexity will add compliance costs for both self-managed funds and for the larger mainstream funds who will have to alter systems to cope with the new requirements. One superannuation expert has told us the increased annual cost of administration for a self-managed fund with more than $1.6 million could run to $3 – 4,000.

SMSFOA Members’ Newsletter #15 27 October 2016

Money Management – No more “simpler super”

Money Management

6 October 2016

Catherine Chivers – Manager for strategic advice at Perpetual Private.

The 2016 Budget handed down on 3 May, 2016 by Treasurer Scott Morrison foreshadowed the most sweeping changes to the superannuation landscape that the Australian financial services industry has seen in close to a decade. 

In recent weeks there has been a flurry of releases from Treasury to give broader effect to the implementation of the Government’s broader reform agenda to improve the sustainability and equity of the superannuation system.

As at 30 September, 2016 there had been two tranches of draft legislation released which provided further detail on how the new rules will operate from 1 July, 2017 and beyond.

At this point, the relevant legislation still needs to pass through Parliament and receive Royal Assent in the normal manner for it to become effective law.

The key elements of the new draft legislation and some of the resulting strategic aspects advisers need to be aware of are outlined below.

What’s new

The key areas addressed in these twin legislative releases will mean that from 1 July, 2017:

  1. The “objective of superannuation” has been established;
  2. A higher spouse income threshold will apply for calculating the spouse contributions tax offsets;
  3. A Low Income Superannuation Tax Offset (LISTO) will apply;
  4. A “transfer balance” cap of $1.6 million is in effect;
  5. The concessional contributions cap (CCs)reduces to $25,000;
  6. The non-concessional contributions (NCCs) cap reduces  to $100,000 per annum (or $300,000 in any three-year period where the “bring-forward” amount is triggered by those able to avail themselves of it);
  7. There is the ability to “catch up” on concessional contributions (note: applicable from 1 July, 2018);
  8. Consumers will see broader retirement income product choice available as a result of income stream product innovation; and
  9. The anti-detriment provision will be abolished.

The objective of superannuation

For the very first time, the objective of the superannuation system is enshrined in legislation covering a “primary” objective and “subsidiary” objectives.

Primary objective

“To provide income in retirement to substitute or supplement the Age Pension.” This is a more expansive purpose than was originally foreshadowed in the 2016 Budget, which merely outlined that the purpose of superannuation was to “supplement” the Age Pension. This primary objective also re-affirms that the purpose of superannuation as “not to allow for tax minimisation or estate planning”.

Subsidiary objectives:

  1. Facilitate consumption smoothing over the course of an individual’s life;
  2. Manage risks in retirement;
  3. Be invested in the best interests of superannuation fund members;
  4. Alleviate fiscal pressures on Government from the retirement income system; and
  5. Be simple, efficient and provide safeguards.

Changes to spouse contribution tax offsets – higher spouse income threshold

From 1 July, 2017, a resident individual will be entitled to a tax offset up to a maximum of $540 in an income year for contributions made to superannuation for their eligible spouse. A spouse will be eligible where the total of the spouse’s assessable income, reportable fringe benefits amounts, and reportable employer superannuation contributions for the income year is less than $40,000 (currently $13,800).

Reduced contributions tax for low income earners – via a new LISTO

From 1 July, 2017, the LISTO seeks to effectively return the tax paid on concessional contributions by a person’s superannuation fund to a person who is a low income earner. Low income earners are defined as individuals with an adjusted taxable income of $37,000 or less. The maximum amount of LISTO payable is $500 per year.

‘Total balance’ cap of $1.6 million

  • Represents the maximum amount which can be transferred into a tax-free income stream for use in retirement, based on “retirement phase” assets calculated as of 30 June, 2017
  • Will index in $100,000 increments in line with the consumer price index (CPI)
  • The transfer balance (TB) cap will be calculated using a “transfer balance” account (TB account) which is similar in concept to an accounting general ledger. Amounts transferred into “retirement phase” (what we presently know as drawing an income stream) give rise to a credit in the account and transfers out (e.g. commutations) give rise to a debit. The TB cap is breached where an individual’s TB account is greater than their relevant TB cap
  • There will be no ability to retain funds in retirement phase in excess of this amount, nor the ability to make additional NCCs once this $1.6 million total superannuation balance threshold is breached. Strict penalties apply for breaches of the TB cap, especially where these are repeated
  • Instead assets will be required to be transferred back to accumulation phase or withdrawn from the superannuation environment entirely. Where assets are transferred to accumulation phase as of 30 June, 2017, a “cost-base” re-set will alleviate the initial capital gains tax (CGT) impact.
  • Complex calculations will apply to the treatment of reversionary income streams for the purposes of the TB cap, however at this stage, reversionary income streams received will also be counted towards the recipients TB cap. Whether this outcome is changed in the final legislation remains to be seen
  • Superannuation balances in excess of the TB cap can remain in accumulation phase indefinitely (and with no balance limit) where they will be taxed at a maximum of 15 per cent
  • Fluctuations in account balances will not be taken into account when determining the available TB cap “space”. For example, where an individual’s account was valued at $1.6 million as of 1 July, 2017, and the balance subsequently declined to $1.4 million on 1 September 2017, they will not be able to add more money into an income stream (called a “retirement phase account”) as they have already fully used their available cap
  • Where an individual only uses part of their TB cap, a “proportionate” approach will apply to assessing eligibility to make further contributions. For example, where an individual transfers $800,000 into a retirement phase account as of 1 July, 2017, they will have used 50 per cent of their available cap. Where the cap is later indexed to $1.8 million they will have 50 per cent of that cap left to use. That is, they will be able to transfer an additional amount of $900,000 into a retirement phase account
  • Personal injury payments contributed within the 90-day window will be exempt from the TB cap
  • Defined benefit schemes will also be subject to the TB cap, with complex calculations required as a result (especially in cases where an individual receives income streams from both taxed and untaxed sources)
  • Modifications to the harsh TB cap are available in cases of a minor child dependant receiving their deceased parent’s benefit
  • New estate planning considerations will arise as a result of the TB cap, which may require review and revision of a client’s estate planning strategy
  • Will also apply to annuities used for retirement purpose. Currently annuities used for retirement purposes are treated very differently to essentially similar monies formally within the superannuation system
  • Importantly, each member of a couple can have a total superannuation balance as of 1 July, 2017 of $1.6 million. There will not be a “shared” $3.2 million cap. That is, there will be zero ability for, say, one party to hold $1 million and the other $2.2 million as of 1 July, 2017 in an attempt to circumvent the new rules

Concessional contributions (CCs) cap changes

  • From 1 July, 2017 the annual cap for each financial year will be $25,000 – currently the cap is $30,000/35,000 per annum
  • The cap will increase in increments of $2,500 in line with average weekly ordinary time earnings (AWOTE) – currently the $30,000 cap is indexed to AWOTE in $5,000 increments
  • Division 293 tax (an extra 15 per cent contributions tax) will apply to an income threshold of $250,000 per annum – currently the threshold is $300,000
  • Special new rules will apply to ensure that contributions to constitutionally protected funds (CPFs) and untaxed or unfunded defined benefits count towards the CCs cap. Currently contributions to CPFs do not count towards the CCs cap, and calculating the impact of relevant contributions for those in untaxed or unfunded defined benefit interests can mean that these remain outside of the CCs cap

New annual NCC cap/revised ‘bring-forward’ rule

  • Can make NCCs of $100,000 a year from 1 July, 2017, or even $300,000 under the revised “bring-forward” rule, so long as an individual is aged under 65 and their total superannuation balances (at 30 June, 2017) is under $1.6 million
  • Where total balances exceed $1.6 million, no NCCs will be permitted. CCs can still be made, in the relevant way
  • Where a balance is “close to” $1.6 million, an individual can only use the “bring-forward” rule to the extent that their super balance stays below $1.6 million
  • Where an individual has partially used the present NCC “bring-forward” rules allowing a $540,000 NCC, they will not be able to benefit from this from 1 July, 2017. Instead, any use of the ‘bring-forward’ rule from 1 July, 2017 will be based on the new caps applying from that date
  • The annual NCC cap and $1.6 million eligibility threshold will be indexed
  • These revised rules will broadly apply to defined benefit and constitutionally protected schemes

‘Catch up’ concessional contributions

  • This increased flexibility benefits those with varying capacity to save and those with interrupted work patterns, to allow them to provide for their own retirement and benefit from the tax concessions to the same extent as those with regular income
  • Individuals aged 65 to 74 who meet the work test will also be able to avail themselves of this proposal
  • Any amounts contributed in excess of the cap will be taxed at the individual’s marginal tax rate, less a 15 per cent tax offset
  • From 1 July, 2018, individuals can “catch-up” on their CCs where their total superannuation balance was less than $500,000 as of 30 June in the previous financial year. Thus, in effect, the first year that an individual will be able to avail themselves of this new measure is 1 July, 2019
  • This measure will mean that additional CCs can be made by using previously unutilised CCs cap amounts from the previous five years
  • Unused cap amounts can be carried forward, with unused CCs cap amounts not used after five years lost

Income stream product innovation

  • In a major step forward for consumer retirement product choice, the earnings tax exemption will now extend to new lifetime products to be known as “deferred products” and “group self-annuities”. Further annuities issued by life companies that represent superannuation income streams will also receive the earnings tax exemption
  • Further, and as previously highlighted, the earnings tax exemption for transition-to-retirement (TTR) income streams will cease from 1 July, 2017. However, TTR income streams will not count for the purposes of the TB cap unless they are considered to be a “standard” account based pension

Farewell to the anti-detriment provision

  • From 1 July, 2017 the anti-detriment (AD) benefit will cease to exist. This benefit effectively provided an uplift to any death benefit paid to that deceased member’s spouse, former spouse and children in the form of a return of contributions tax the deceased member paid during their lifetime
  • For members who die on or after 1 July, 2017, their loved ones will be unable to receive the benefit. For members who pass away before this date and who were within a fund which paid the AD benefit, so long as the AD benefit is paid by 1 July, 2019, their loved ones can still receive it.

Whether the collective outcome of these measures achieve their stated policy aim of improving the sustainability of the $2.1 trillion Australian sector remains to be seen. It is certainly exciting times to be an advice practitioner helping to guide clients through an ever more-complex maze to achieve their desired retirement lifestyle goals.

Catherine Chivers is the manager for strategic advice at Perpetual Private.

Super pension transfer limits likely to create a headache

Australian Financial Review

24 October 2016

Sally Patten

So you thought that a $1.6 million superannuation pension limit would be
simple, eh?
It sounds so straightforward, if not every Coalition MP’s cup of Earl Grey tea
with a slice of lemon. Under the proposed rules, superannuants can put a
maximum of $1.6 million into a tax-free pension. Any excess must be left in an
accumulation account, where it attracts a 15 per cent earnings tax.
Sadly, nothing is elementary when it comes to retirement savings. Still, even by the super system’s
complex standards, the way in which the balance transfer cap is to be calculated looks particularly
nasty – and potentially expensive to implement.
The limit is to be indexed to inflation in increments of $100,000. So far so good, although hopefully
industry executives will be able to convince the government to base the cap on wages, given that every
other super threshold is linked to wages rather than the consumer price index. The earnings generated
by a pension, after all, are a substitute for the superannuant’s wage or salary. That is the whole point.
But back to the calculations. In order to avoid a drain on the public purse, the $1.6 million limit is to be
indexed proportionately. This means that for people who do not transfer the full $1.6 million into a
super pension in the first instance, the percentage of the limit that they have not used will be indexed.
Bear with me.
If a retiree transfers $800,000 into a pension account in July next year, when the rules are due to be
enforced, they will retain the right to contribute another 50 per cent of the $1.6 million limit at a future
date. If by the time they contribute a second tranche the limit has risen to $1.7 million, they will be able
to contribute $800,000, plus 50 per cent of the $100,000 incremental rise – or $850,000 in total. Geddit?
This effectively means that over time we will all have individual pension transfer limits, depending on
how much we put into a super pension and when.
This is not to say that the overall thrust of limiting the amount of money that can be transferred into a
tax-free pension is a poor idea. But when rules are changed there are invariably trade-offs to be made
between simplicity and revenue gains. The government has clearly gone for the cash. Let’s hope the
complexity can be managed and the rules understood.

ATO may not cope
The Australian Taxation Office has been charged with calculating all the sums, but some industry
executives have expressed concerns that the ATO may not be able to cope. It will be relying
on “SuperStream”, the electronic linking of data and payments, to get access to the necessary data, but
SuperStream is still a work-in-progress.
“SuperStream is only being implemented,” says one industry executive.
Then there is the expense.
The Australian Institute of Superannuation Trustees estimates that it will cost super funds – excluding
self-managed schemes – about $90 million to implement proportionately indexed transfer
balances. The ATO is likely to incur a greater cost to implement the necessary systems, argues the
AIST.
An alternative would be to give all superannuants access to the same incremental increases.
“The revenue at risk is small relative to the cost of tracking individual balances,” says David Haynes,
executive manager of policy and research at the AIST.
The SMSF Association also has its doubts.
“We believe that the rules in relation to indexation of any unused transfer balance cap are complex and
require individual tracking of personal transfer balance caps, in order to avoid access to small
increments in the cap. It is our view that this rule adds a level of complexity that is unnecessary for the
potential revenue risk it is seeking to avoid,” says the AIST in its October submission to Treasury.
“It creates significant cost and administration inefficiencies with little benefit to government revenue, ”
the SMSF Association adds.
So much for consumer-friendliness.

Changes to superannuation underline ill-advised policy and waste

The Australian

25 October 2016

Judith Sloan – Contributing Economics Editor – Melbourne.

I received an email from the Treasury the other day. It was dated October 14. I was being invited to make a submission on the third tranche of the superannuation changes being put forward by the government — the proposed new cap on non-concessional ­contributions.

Here’s the kicker: I had to have my submission in by October 21. That’s right — I (and everyone else invited to make a submission) was given one week to prepare and submit a submission. Let’s face it, this is a Clayton’s consultation. It is consultation when you don’t care what anyone says. It’s a joke.

I then looked back on previous emails from the Treasury. For the second tranche of the super package, I was given nine business days to make a submission on 220 pages of exposure drafts and explanatory memos. There are 260 paragraphs explaining the Treasury Laws Amendment (Fair and Sustainable Superannuation) 2016, though I particularly like the ­acknowledgment in the material that there are several areas that are actually not settled. This is sham consultation on steroids.

And don’t even get me started about the faux invitation to hear different views on the legislated definition of the purpose of super. Notwithstanding its glaring faults, the responsible minister, Kelly O’Dwyer, is not for turning, which in this case is a bad thing.

Indeed, given her parliamentary performance, it is a fair question whether she is up to the job. It was one thing to vote in favour of an amendment of the opposition criticising the government, it is ­another thing altogether to fail to explain the purpose of a piece of legislation she is sponsoring. The fact she couldn’t describe the ­impact of the change to the taxation of effective dividends really makes you wonder whether she’s in the right job. It was cringe-­worthy stuff.

For purely political reasons, the government has decided it must get the super changes into law by the end of the year, with the new arrangements in place from July 1, 2017. It won’t matter how many people point out the difficulties and cost of the changes. The decision has been made.

It’s the Gillard government all over again. A policy decision is made for political reasons. No thought is given to the problems of implementation, of unintended consequences, of the disproportionate costs. Think the Gonski package and the underlying legislation. Think the National Disability Insurance Scheme and the underlying legislation. And now think superannuation and the underlying legislation.

Don’t believe the misleading information reaffirmed by the Treasurer that only 4 per cent of superannuation savers and retirees will be affected by the changes. This figure is just wrong; over time the proportion rises dramatically; and the compliance costs will apply to all super members. Every fund will be required to invest heavily to accommodate the changes and all members will bear the costs — not just those directly affected. To be sure, the government doesn’t care but the Treasurer should not be misleading the public on this matter.

There are some very serious technical problems with the draft legislation, including the curious introduction of accounting terms rather than sticking with the convention of using the language of taxation law. There are 23 new ­definitions introduced into just one tranche of the legislation. There are also errors in the draft legislation and the explanatory memos, of which the latter have no legal effect but are required to understand the law.

Some of the complications ­include the fact many superannuation investments are in life companies that are subject to different tax rules; the treatment of death benefits/reversionary pensions and whether they will be ­required to be cashed out; the handling of multiple accounts when one or more is a defined benefit account; and the treatment of deferred superannuation investment streams and their applicability to self-managed funds. There is also the egregious suggestion that ­superannuants face a 30 per cent tax penalty if they violate the transfer balance cap more than once. This is notwithstanding the fact the arrangements are so complex that advisers are very likely to make mistakes and ­unwittingly give their clients the wrong advice — for a high price, of course.

The process is a shambles and there is no way the government’s imposed deadline can be met. Putting the bills to the parliament this year would be highly irresponsible. But my guess is that, at a minimum, the Senate will refer all the bills to be scrutinised by committees. There is no way that the start date of the changes can remain July 1, 2017, which will mean all the make-believe budget savings will have to be recalculated.

Apart from the ill-conceived — nay, harebrained — nature of the government’s proposals, the ­respon­sible staff in the bureau­cracy are far too inexperienced and lacking in knowledge to put the scheme into workable legislative effect. The fact there have been many confidential discussions going on behind closed doors (so much for transparency on the part of this government) underlines the fact the public servants are desperate to pick the brains of people who might actually know about these things — and that doesn’t ­include them.

There is no doubt the government needs to get on with repairing the budget. But attempting to fix the budget by implementing bad policy won’t lead to an ­improvement in the bottom line.

Breaking promises might all be in a day’s work for the Treasurer but he needs to be aware these costly and complex changes will fail to raise the sums of money forecast, particularly because ­undermining the trust in the system will inevitably lead to a higher dependence on the age pension.

The fact the government is happy to hand out more than $1 billion a year to support the parents of migrants, to spend $3bn more on childcare, to write off billions in bad VET FEE-HELP debts, to waste billions on regional boondoggles and to commit tens of billions too much to construct warships and submarines — and the list of wasteful spending goes on and on — explains why many in the community continue to fume about the super changes (and high taxes more generally).

There is really no difference ­between the Gillard and Turnbull governments when it comes to ­implementing hasty and ill-judged policies and wasting money.

Tax Institute’s second tranche submission

taxinstitute_log_tagline

10 October 2016

Ms Jenny Wilkinson
Division Head
Retirement Income Policy Division
The Treasury
Langton Crescent
PARKES ACT 2600

Submitted electronically: https://consult.treasury.gov.au/retirement-income-policydivision/super-reform-package-tranche-2/consultation/intro/view

Dear Ms Wilkinson

Superannuation reform package – tranche 2

The Tax Institute welcomes the opportunity to make a submission to the Treasury in relation to the Superannuation reform package – tranche 2 set of exposure drafts and explanatory memoranda (Tranche 2).

Given the short timeframe provided for submissions on Tranche 2, the submission below does not purport to cover all of the substantive issues arising from this material.

The Institute, along with its expert members in the area of superannuation, would be pleased to provide additional details on any of the matters set out below or to address the material in more detail in person.

Summary

The Institute submits that further consultation is required to discuss and resolve the technical challenges in administering the current measures in practice. We strongly urge the Government to consider the practical difficulties with some of these measures and be open to consider alternatives that could largely achieve the same objective, but also with the subsidiary objective that the superannuation system be simple, efficient and provide safeguards in mind.

Discussion

General comments

We submit that the consultation period for the superannuation reform package should be extended to allow a more considered redrafting of the exposure drafts. A consultation period of nine business days has been provided for the public to provide comments on Tranche 2, which comprises approximately 220 pages of exposure drafts and explanatory memoranda. This is an insufficient period to provide considered comments on this significant and complex material, which taxpayers and their advisers will be dealing with for decades to come.

Members of the Institute’s Superannuation Committee also consider a start date of 1 July 2017 for many of the measures in the package is not realistic given the uncertainty around the final form of the legislation and the considerable systems and other work that trustees and administrators need to do to implement the measures.

We understand that some consultation on Tranche 2 has taken place on a confidential basis. The current drafting of the material focusses primarily on administration, procedure and systems. Given the volume of technical issues that have become apparent at the draft legislation stage (many of which are set out in this submission), we are concerned that an appropriate cross-section of stakeholders in the superannuation system have not been consulted at an early stage. We have heard from members whose organisations have been consulted on a confidential basis that they have not been able to gather feedback from other relevant stakeholders and experts within their particular fund or organisation to improve the quality of the legislative package.

While the explanatory memoranda for Tranche 2 predicts further consultation on some discrete issues, this form of ad hoc consultation coupled with the release of the superannuation reform package in tranches increases the risk of interaction issues, consequential amendments and any necessary transitional relief not being fully considered or identified. For example, the interaction between the introduction of the transfer balance cap in Tranche 2 with the amendments contemplated in relation to eligibility for making non-concessional contributions, cannot be considered because the non-concessional contribution amendments have not yet been released. Another example identified is how an excess above transfer caps will work where the super fund invests solely in investment policies with life companies which are taxed exclusively under Division 320.

We are concerned that the exposure drafts are inconsistent with the subsidiary objective of superannuation that the superannuation system be simple, efficient and provide safeguards. In particular, the drafting of Tranche 2 is overly complex and cannot be readily understood without reference to explanatory memoranda, which do not have legal force on a standalone basis. For example, the exposure drafts introduce approximately 23 new definitions into the tax law, with requirements to maintain account of multiple new superannuation concepts – including Transfer Balance Accounts, Personal Transfer Balance Caps, Unused Cap Space, Unused Cap Percentage and Highest Transfer Balance.

Further, we consider the use of accounting terms such as debits and credits in the transfer balance cap to be generally inappropriate in their application to the new superannuation concepts, and they may invite a quasi-accounting construction of the provisions – moving away from well-known legal principles and judicial concepts applied in superannuation and tax law. In addition, the draft material does not appear to adopt the strict accounting definitions and therefore could cause confusion for advisers and risk misinterpretation by superannuants. The uncertainty of announced measures and the substance that will ultimately become law means advisers cannot properly inform clients on these measures at this stage. Other than accountants, not many people are aware that a debit is an entry that affects the left side of an accounting ledger, whilst a credit affects the right side. In the absence of specialist assistance, which forces up compliance costs, the use of such concepts will result in mistakes being be made.

The media release issued by the Hon Scott Morrison MP, the Treasurer, on 27 September 2016 in relation to Tranche 2 states that 96 per cent of individuals with superannuation will either be better off or unaffected as a result of these changes.1 The Institute wishes to point out that the likely substantial administrative costs of implementing these measures will not be limited to those individuals directly impacted by the measures in revenue terms.

Significant education, updating documentation, upskilling process and reporting costs will also be incurred by the industry and that will be incurred all members to implement the systems necessary to comply with these measures. For example, some industry funds have more than 5 million members but the key measures may impact very few within these funds but all of the members of the fund will generally be required to pay for the updated systems to cater for the new changes The complexity of the measures is also likely to lead to further costs and inefficiencies in terms of work created by misunderstandings and errors that requires a fair degree of learning and education to be rolled out to members by fund providers, advisers, ATO and Government. The costs of collection of each $1.00 of revenue from each proposal should be tested to ensure the costs are not out of proportion to the revenue gained. The industry-wide costs should be considered and not just a fund-specific cost.

Given the above issues, the Institute considers that the introduction of the measures to Parliament in sufficiently clear and certain form by the end of the calendar year is ambitious. The application of the majority of the amendments in Tranche 2 to commence on 1 July 2017 also provides insufficient lead time to finalise and implement the measures, particularly given that other tax measures such as the Attribution Managed Investment Trust regime and measures to improve compliance through enhanced third party reporting and data matching will also impact on large superannuation funds and also commence on 1 July 2017. Furthermore, Trustees and Registrable Superannuation Entities are already facing a myriad of regulatory reform measures from both APRA and ASIC (ranging from MySuper ADA transfers to enhanced disclosure/reporting with Regulatory Guide 97 Disclosing fees and costs in PDSs and periodic statements).

Transfer balance cap

Defined benefit funds

The Institute is concerned about the lack of clarity for how credits and debits are to be applied to the transfer balance account for members with multiple income streams across multiple funds where some of those income streams (lifetime pensions) are “non-commutable superannuation income streams” referred to as “capped defined benefit income streams”. Special values are applied to determine the credit to the transfer balance account for members with lifetime pensions or certain other term pensions and then special rules apply to calculating the debit value of the income stream – unlike for other account based income streams where the actual lump sum commutation value is applied as a debit against the transfer balance account (possibly resulting in a negative balance).

As such, the Institute notes that the new rules will, in effect, require separate sub-accounts of the transfer balance account to be maintained in respect of lifetime pensions – because it would appear that a commutation amount (in respect of a lifetime pension or like income stream) cannot be applied as a debit to the transfer balance account without calculating the special debit value by reference to the special value credited to the account when the lifetime pension or like income stream commenced. Paragraph 1.186 of the Exposure Draft Explanatory Materials appears to confirm this:

1.186 The extent to which an excess is attributable to capped defined benefit income streams is worked out by reference to an individual’s capped defined benefit balance. This balance is a sub-account of the individual’s transfer balance account and includes all debits and credits that relate to capped defined benefit income streams. That is, the capped defined benefit balance reflects the net amount of capital an individual has transferred to the retirement phase in respect of capped defined benefit income streams. [Schedule 1, Part 1, item 3, subsection 294-125(3) of the ITAA 1997]

There would appear to be a high likelihood for misunderstandings, misreporting and mistakes to occur in respect of these kinds of blended transfer balance accounts (operating with a sub-account). As a minimum, the Institute considers that the Commissioner should be given broad discretion to issue relief with respect to such matters.

Calculation of the cap (credits)

Credits to the transfer balance cap measure include death benefit/reversionary pensions. While the legislation makes it clear that any amounts over the transfer balance cap must be commuted it is not clear whether death benefits can be commuted into accumulation phase or whether they must be paid as lump sums pursuant to regulation 6.21 of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Regulations (SISR). The examples used in the Explanatory Materials for child pensions would suggest that the measures foresee that a cashing out of the excess as a lump sum will be required.

Spouses and other financial dependants have always been permitted to continue to hold their spouse’s death benefits in their superannuation funds by way of a reversionary pension or death benefit pension. The examples used in the Explanatory Materials for child pensions would suggest that the measures foresee that a cashing out of the excess as a lump sum will be required. If funds are no longer permitted to provide pension benefits to reversionary spouses and children under age 25 and other financial dependants for amounts over the transfer balance cap (or adjusted cap in the case of child pensions) that is a significant change from the current rules. Such a position would also go against the rationale of the current measure (i.e. that the measure is not designed to stop members accumulating benefits but rather caps out the pension phase tax concession).

The Institute notes the likelihood of significant liquidity issues arising for some superannuation funds if substantial portions of current reversionary pensions are required to be cashed by 1 July 2017.

We submit that the legislation should be amended to permit death benefits being paid in the form of a pension under SISR (i.e. spouses, financial dependants and interdependents) to be commuted to accumulation phase and to not be required to be cashed out of the superannuation system. This could be in an accumulation account or a taxable pension account. Alternatively, such “excess death benefit pensions” could be retained as pensions but not qualify as exempt current pension income

As a minimum, this measure should be available to in effect grandfather any death benefit/reversionary income streams that have commenced prior to 1 July 2017.

It is also relevant to note in the context of death benefit income streams/reversionary pensions that many superannuation products may have been issued to members (and paid for) as a reversionary income stream product. A requirement to cause excess transfer cap amounts to be cashed out of the superannuation system significantly alters the structure of the product that members may have selected and paid for and the Institute submits this provides further support for allowing these death benefits to be retained in accumulation phase within the superannuation system
In addition to the comments above, we note the phrase “retirement phase recipient of a superannuation income stream” is used a number of times. It is submitted that the phrase “retirement phase recipient” is sufficient (and less circular).

Excess transfer balance determinations and tax

The Institute would submit that the Commissioner be given a broad discretion to remit excess transfer balance tax or disregard a certain period when determining the notional earnings where the delay in issuing a determination is beyond the control of the member. The Institute is particularly concerned that this may likely occur if insufficient lead time to finalise and implement results in delays with Funds reporting and/or ATO to issue determinations within a reasonable time of receiving all the information.

Miscellaneous

The Institute is also concerned about the penal nature of the imposition of a 30% tax on second and subsequent breaches of the cap due to the complexity of the measures and the length of time over which taxpayers are likely to be in receipt of income streams following retirement. There is a high possibility of one or more errors with respect to an individual’s income streams across multiple providers and over periods in excess of 20 or so years. Further, it is noted that there is no equivalent concept for a further sanction to be applied to the capped defined benefit tax.

Catch up concessional contributions

Schedule 6 of the Treasury Laws Amendment (Fair and Sustainable Superannuation) Bill 2016 Exposure Draft contains amendments to the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 to give effect to the Government’s 2016/17 Federal Budget measure ‘Superannuation Reform Package – Catch-up Concessional Contributions’.

In our view, broadly the proposed changes are positive changes in terms of allowing individuals to make catch-up contributions where they have not fully utilised their concessional contribution caps in the previous five financial years, noting that the measure requires that they have a total superannuation balance of less than $500,000 on 30 June in year prior to making the catch-up contribution. This measure allows those who may not had the capacity or support in previous years to increase their superannuation account balances to a level commensurate with that which they would have enjoyed if the concessional cap had been fully utilised.

However, we note the following issues:

  • The mechanism for allowing the catch-up is confusing.
  • The basis for determining the total superannuation account balance at a particular time appears to contain an error.

Confusing mechanism for applying the catch-up

The draft legislation introduces two related but separate concepts – “unused concessional contributions cap” and “unapplied unused concessional contribution cap”. For each financial year the “unused concessional contribution cap” is to be determined. It is the amount by which concessional contributions fall short of the concessional contributions cap for a particular year. This amount is not adjusted even where catch-up contributions are made in future years. Instead, a second concept of “unapplied unused concessional contribution cap” is introduced.

Rather than reducing the unused concessional contributions cap as it is utilised in making catch-up payments in subsequent years, the legislation requires a separate determination of the unapplied unused concessional contribution cap. As previously unused concessional contributions caps are utilised or applied, the unapplied unused concessional contribution cap reduces, but without reducing the unused concessional contribution cap.
The mechanism is likely to cause confusion given that the unused concessional contribution cap does not reduce as it is applied (or used). It seems a more logical and intuitive approach would be to determine the unused concessional contribution cap initially for a financial year, and then for the legislation to provide for this amount to be reduced as it is applied (or used) so that at any point in time the “unused concessional contribution cap” for a financial year reflected the amount that was otherwise available for the individual to use in making catch up concessional contributions

Total superannuation account balance

In Part 2 of Schedule 6 the draft legislation sets out a mechanism for determining the “total superannuation account balance” at a particular time. This is relevant in determining whether a member has a total superannuation balance less than $500,000 on the last day of the financial year preceding the year in which they wish to make catch-up payments.

The draft legislation breaks down the balance into separate components, and sets out a specific mechanism for determining the retirement phase value of an individual’s total superannuation balance which arises because an individual has a transfer balance account. The explanatory memorandum in paragraph 6.28 described the approach in the following terms: “The retirement phase value of the individual’s total superannuation balance is determined by the balance of their transfer balance account, adjusted to reflect the current value of account based superannuation interests in retirement phase.”

However, the specific mechanism in the proposed legislation appears confusing, unnecessary and potentially incorrect.
Specifically, section 307-230(2)(b) requires one to “increase the amount of (the transfer balance account) balance by the total amount of the superannuation benefits that would become payable if” the individual had a right to cause the superannuation interest to cease and voluntarily caused the interest to so cease. It seems that the word “by” ought to instead be replaced by the word “to” – that is, that the adjustment required is to the amount that the member would have been paid had they voluntarily ceased, rather than increasing it by the total amount they would have received in those circumstances (the latter appears likely to give rise to a double counting and over-inflation of the member’s retirement phase value).
It is also unclear why such a mechanism is to be adopted and whether it achieves the outcome suggested in the explanatory memorandum. As an alternative approach it may be more appropriate that instead of taking the amount of the transfer balance account at the time and then seeking to increase it by an appropriate adjustment, that instead the balance of the account would be taken as the total amount of the superannuation benefit that would become payable if there was a right to cease the interests at the time and the individual voluntarily caused their interest to cease at that time.

Innovative income streams and integrity

New Deferred Superannuation Income Streams (DSIS)

These are income stream products which will enjoy the earnings tax exemption but will not have any immediate pension payment obligations until the end of a deferral period (say when the purchaser attains age 80). The requirements which a financial product has to satisfy in order to qualify as a DSIS are yet to be determined. Presumably there will be additional sub-regulations to 1.05 & 1.06 of the SISR. These products will be either deferred annuities issued by life insurance companies or “grouped self annuities” in which a cohort of pensioners in a large super fund forms a group so that any account balance released by early death of a member will be used to underwrite the payment guarantee. Presumably there will be restrictions on exiting the contract/cohort – as otherwise there will be no profits to transfer from those that die early to those that survive.

These products cannot be issued by SMSFs. Presumably the justification for excluding SMSFs from this type of income stream is that (a) there is no counterparty which will shoulder the longevity risk (in the case of deferred annuities – it is the issuing life insurance/registered organisation) or (b) that an SMSF does not have a sufficient number of members which can be grouped into a cohort where the longevity risk is shared amongst the cohort.

However, excluding SMSFs from DSIS may significantly reduce the attractiveness of SMSFs. A member concerned by longevity risk with $800,000 in super could buy an account-based pension with $400,000 and with $400,000 buy a DSIS where the deferral period ends at age 80. Under the new rules the $400,000 invested in the DSIS will from day 1 enjoy the “earning tax exemption” and only commence payment at when the deferral period ends – say when the investor is aged 80. (Strictly, if the DSIS is purchased before an unrestricted release condition has been satisfied, the earnings tax exemption only applies from the date an unrestricted release conditions occurs and the value of the DSIS will be credited to the transfer balance account when the earnings tax exemption applies to the product.)

The longevity risk of account-based pensions is magnified (if not created) by the minimum drawdown requirements in later years.
If the Government wishes to address the above discrepancy between the treatment of SMSFs and DSISs, the following changes could be made to the rules:

  • reduce the excessive mandatory drawdown rate in later years or
  • allow SMSFs to issue DSIS (albeit there will be no payment guarantee). To maintain integrity, the DSIS in an SMSF could operate by having the income stream commuted on death (if the account has not previously exhausted) and commutation payment made to the estate of the deceased member.

Transition to Retirement Income Streams (TRIS)

TRIS on the hand will not be recognised as a retirement phase income stream going forward and will lose their earnings tax exemption. It should be noted that for efficiency and economies of scale reasons, all assets backing pension liabilities are typically pooled into common investment asset pool(s). Members in large superannuation funds typically own units in these investment asset pools. The value of their account based income stream is determined by the number of units they hold in the particular asset pool x price. Earnings tax if it were to be calculated would be calculated at this investment asset pool level and not by pension type or down to member level.

To administer this measure, Funds would need to be able to attribute and isolate any earnings tax to just members in that asset pool that have a TRIS income stream. This will require asset segregation of the existing asset pool (shared by TRIS and non-TRIS members) with possibly CGT relief required in certain circumstances. Furthermore, the unit price would typically capture realised and unrealised income & gains and the earnings tax payable each year should be limited to just income and realised gains only and not unrealised.

The Institute is concerned with the cost and effort involved to deal with this particular class of pension and members. We submit that taxing the income stream benefits that these TRIS members received could achieve the same objective and not require any investment restructure and asset segregation. As an alternative, members who were preservation age to age 59 could lose entitlement to the 15% tax offset on their assessable income stream benefit, whereas those aged 60 and over but not retired could be taxed 15% on their income stream benefits.

Administrative issues

Commutation Authority

The Institute is concerned that the current 30 day time limit provided to superannuation income stream provider to comply is not reasonable. Particularly if as outlined in Paragraph 1.131 of the Explanatory Memoranda they are also required to make reasonable efforts to consult with the member first, to seek their wish/preference as to whether to roll the excess back to the accumulation phase or cash it out. We would submit that 90 days would be a more reasonable time frame to allow member and provider to discuss and process the request. Furthermore, there may be instances in which assets supporting the particular income stream may be temporarily illiquid or non-commutable and require more time for an orderly redemption in order to avoid unnecessary penalties and/or break costs.

In the event there is a failure by the superannuation income stream provider to comply, the consequence is that the investment earnings supporting that particular income stream will cease to be exempt from tax and deemed to be effective from the start of the financial year and for the whole income year. It should be noted that this particular calculation is extremely difficult in relation to members in a large superannuation fund whereby their interest in the fund is based on their share in a single investment asset pool (as noted above in relation TRIS). A failure to comply with a commutation authority has the effect of retrospectively deeming certain member(s) as not belonging to this particular tax exempt cohort. Significant build is required by large superannuation funds to overhaul their systems to calculate earnings tax based on the tax attribute of a member (i.e. member level, as opposed to investment asset pool level). At the very least, one would need to track what income and realised gains were attributed to each member in the investment asset pool, when currently there is no income distribution made to these members.

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If you would like to discuss any of the above, please contact either me or Tax Counsel, Thilini Wickramasuriya, on 02 8223 0044.

Yours sincerely

Arthur Athanasiou
President

1 http://sjm.ministers.treasury.gov.au/media-release/105-2016/

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