Get ASX Price

 


  Latest Planning News
Hot Issues
The real value of advice
Taking a deeper dive into indexation of the transfer balance cap
ASIC sounds warning around high-yield bond scams
How to pass the diversification test
Rollout of Director ID Numbers (DIN) is ahead of schedule
The perks of staying invested
Retirees proceeding with downsizing plans as confidence rises
Early access boosted interest in advice
Vaccination rates as they happen around the world
Approaching the dawn
Videos and other resources for our clients
Retirement the ‘number one trigger’ for financial advice
‘Unfinished superannuation business’ to watch for in 2021
Superannuation ideas for 2021
Retirees need new super investment approach
Returning expats reminded on tax snares with pensions, investments
2020 is coming to an end. Phew!!
ATO flags key deadlines for early release of super
Retirement costs rising despite COVID impacts
Government targets fund expenditure, best interests in new super reforms
Small SMSFs develop rapidly
Investing basics for first timers
Behind the dash in new market listings
Super, death, and taxes
What millennials are thinking about investing and retirement
Capital preservation front of mind for SMSF returns
Articles archive
Quarter 4 October - December 2020
Quarter 3 July - September 2020
Quarter 3 of 2020
Articles
September update of latest COVID-19 initiatives.
Update of Superannuation contribution rules from July 1, 2020.
More than $31bn paid under early super release
Your super fund, your choice
SMSFs urged to act on compliance issues ahead of tougher penalties
A beginner's investment guide to long-term wealth
ATO confirms important issue on pension payments
How SMSF trustees navigated COVID-19 volatility
JobKeeper - Latest Update
Pandemic spurs a rise in investment scams
Estate planning and investments
Early release of Super extended to Dec 31
Excess TBC issues surfacing with reduced pension account values
The Bond Market.
Treasury underestimates early super by $15bn
'But how will we pay for this?'
SMSFs urged to review leases before granting rent relief
New financial year to bring new rules for super
Extra Tools & Resources for our clients.
Ways to outsmart your cognitive biases
COVID-19 cuts risk pension pain
New laws prompt review of SMSF estate plans
SMSF sector grows, new fund numbers drop
Treasury underestimates early super by $15bn

 

The government now expects around $42 billion to be removed from the super system as a result of the early release scheme, having revised up its initial estimates of $27 billion at the start of the scheme.

 



       


Treasury division head of retirement income policy Robert Jeremenko told the Senate committee on COVID-19 on Thursday that the government was now expecting $41.9 billion to be removed from the super system following the extension of the scheme to December and taking into account “lived experience” of the pandemic which indicated consumers had taken up the scheme in higher numbers than expected.


“The early access measure was developed in early March and I don’t think anyone in Australia would have been able to predict what the impact of the pandemic was,” Mr Jeremenko said.


“What we had to do was use our best estimate, but the actual lived experience of those first three months up to 30 June was actually that we had $20.1 billion removed. So, what we did was, given the extra three months of actual numbers, assumed a certain take-up for the remaining three months plus the extension.”
Mr Jeremenko said as at 28 July, $31.9 billion had been withdrawn from super.


He added that the Treasury could revise up the expected withdrawal numbers further depending on how many more consumers accessed the scheme.



“This six months we are in now, they are estimates. They are best estimates, but we will revise as we have done when we see actual numbers coming through and that will give us a real feel of the level of uptake,” he said.


 


 


Sarah Kendell
30 July 2020
smsfadviser.com


 




8th-August-2020