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Home News

New data points to spiralling retirement costs

Recent figures by the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia reveal that the costs of a modest retirement for both singles and couples have risen by around a third in the past decade.

by Reporter
May 30, 2017
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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In the 10 years and nine months between June 2006 and March 2017, the ASFA standard for a modest retirement increased 33 per cent for a single person and 36 per cent for a couple.

The cost of a comfortable retirement rose by 23 per cent for a single person and 26 per cent for a couple.

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The current rate of annual income required for a modest retirement living at March 2017 is $24,250 for singles and $34,855 for couples.

The rate of income required for a comfortable retirement is $43,665 for singles and $59,971 for couples.

During this period, there was an overall increase of 28.6 per cent in the consumer price index, ASFA chief executive Martin Fahy said.

Over this time, electricity costs jumped by 124 per cent, health costs rose by 60 per cent, property rates and charges went up by 83 per cent, and food costs rose by 24 per cent.

Price changes for less essential items tended to be lower and, in some cases, fell, Mr Fahy said.

The price of clothing fell by 3 per cent over the period, while the cost of communications including telephone and mobile phone charges fell by 8 per cent.

“The cost of international holidays rose by a relatively modest 16 per cent over the period,” Mr Fahy said.

While the age pension increased in real times by 70 per cent for a single person and 54 per cent for a couple, this was from an incredibly low base, he said.

“The age pension is adjusted by what is the greater of the increase in average wages or the CPI. During the period, average earnings rose by 43 per cent,” Mr Fahy said.

He said ASFA is increasingly concerned about the reality of many more retirees “at the mercy of the private rental market”.

“When you consider the increase in renting costs, it highlights the need for increasing numbers of retirees to have much greater super balances to support a reasonable retirement.”

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