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Home News

Govt’s tax relief ‘creates certainty’ for SMSF market

The Coalition’s scrapping of the tax on pension earnings above $100,000 in the draw-down phase has received widespread support from the SMSF industry as a measure that will restore confidence in the super system.

by Katarina Taurian
November 7, 2013
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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The Coalition yesterday announced it will not proceed with Labor’s proposed tax on member’s superannuation pension earnings above $100,000 in the draw-down phase.

“The advice we received is that the measure would be very complex to administer and result in large compliance costs,” said Assistant Treasurer Arthur Sinodinos at a joint media conference with Treasurer Joe Hockey in Sydney yesterday.

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The scrapping of the widely contested tax restores some stability to the SMSF market, the Financial Planning Association’s Dante De Gori told SMSF Adviser.

“With all proposals… it’s very hard to provide clear advice when you don’t know if it’s actually going to become law or not,” Mr De Gori said.

“What today’s announcement does is it creates certainty for the market, it creates [certainty] for advisers in providing advice for their clients, whether they’re SMSF or otherwise.”

The SMSF Professionals’ Association of Australia (SPAA) also supports the scrapping of the tax, with chief executive Andrea Slattery telling SMSF Adviser it would have been “unworkable, inefficient and costly”.

“It actually affected retrospectively people’s planning ability, because it taxed people’s earnings already in the pension phase,” Ms Slattery said.

“We were also concerned that depending on the investment earnings of the fund, the proposed tax would potentially apply to many more than the estimated 16,000 funds with $2 million of assets or more,” she added.

The government also announced yesterday it will not proceed with Labor’s proposal to put a $2,000 cap on the amount people can deduct as self-education expenses.

The Institute of Public Accountants (IPA) has welcomed this move, with chief executive Andrew Conway saying the cap was “backward in thinking”.

“The new government has been quick to revert what would have been a very bad policy. For the accounting profession the need to keep up to date is paramount and is amongst the highest of all professions,” he said.

SPAA was also critical of this policy, labelling it “short-sighted and self-defeating”.

“It would inhibit professionals, including those in financial services, [from] maintaining and improving their knowledge to better serve their clients,” Ms Slattery said.

“Ultimately, this proposed policy was going to have a negative effect on consumers and SPAA is happy to see it abandoned.”

Tags: News

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Comments 4

  1. Dr Terry Dwyer says:
    12 years ago

    Yes the excess contributions tax on non-concessional contributions is absurd. I have had 2 cases where it has been triggered on normal people because they pulled out their super during the GFC and then put it back. No net new contributions but half the capital seized as tax. In one case a couple has lost half their super saved over 35 years work by both of them. A really shocking result.

    Reply
  2. paul simpson says:
    12 years ago

    get rid of the rotten Excess Contributions Tax on mistaken contributions as well while youre at it.

    In fact all accounting mistakes should be reversible like every one else can!

    Reply
  3. Dr Terry Dwyer says:
    12 years ago

    I am very glad the new government has some common sense – rather uncommon these days.

    Reply
  4. Elaine says:
    12 years ago

    Nice to see the government acting intelligently. What a nightmare that would have been!

    Reply

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SMSF Adviser is the authoritative source of news, opinions and market intelligence for Australia’s SMSF sector. The SMSF sector now represents more than one million members and approximately one third of Australia's superannuation savings. Over the past five years the number of SMSF members has increased by close to 30 per cent, highlighting the opportunity for engaged, informed and driven professionals to build successful SMSF advice business.

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