“Right now,we’re on track to spend more on super tax concessions than the age pension by around 2050,” Chalmers said in a speech in Sydney on Monday.
“I’m not convinced that’s a sustainable way to get to our destination – good retirement incomes for more Australians,now and into the future.”
Currently,people can make before-tax contributions to their super,which are taxed at a flat rate of 15 per cent in the fund. Those concessional contributions are capped at $27,500 this financial year. Once people retire,investment earnings in their fund are generally tax-free,and payments to individuals once they are aged 60 or over are also generally taxed at 0 per cent.
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Tax concessions on super are forecast to cost the budget $52.6 billion in 2022-23,just under the total cost of the age pension at $55.3 billion,according to an analysis of the October budget by the Australia Institute.
On Monday,the treasureropened consultation on a definition of superannuation that would be enshrined in legislation.
The government has suggested that the objective of superannuation “is to preserve savings to deliver income for a dignified retirement,alongside government support,in an equitable and sustainable way”. The “preservation of super” was to ensure superannuation contributions should not be accessed unless as retirement income,it said.