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Home News

Including SMSFs in RIC has its benefits: expert

There are pros and cons for including SMSFs in the retirement income covenant, says a leading adviser.

by Keeli Cambourne
January 17, 2024
in News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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In the latest SMSF Adviser podcast, Aaron Dunn, CEO of Smarter SMSF, said if the covenant were to operate successfully with the inclusion of SMSFs, it would need to ensure that it didn’t overlap with a range of other aspects such as investment strategy requirements.

Mr Dunn said the government raising the prospect of including SMSFs under the RIC could be a way for it to “disincentivise the role” of SMSFs.

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“SMSFs have probably north of 40 per cent of clients already in the retirement phase so it has led the way in this area,” he said.

“The government has naturally asked the question as it looks to the outcomes of this and through consultation on the retirement income policy, and more broadly, whether the RIC should actually have a role to play within the SMSF sector.”

Mr Dunn said the inclusion of SMSFs in the covenant was previously raised before it was legislated on 1 July 2022.

“Ultimately, there were some concerns raised including timeframes that saw the government quickly remove SMSFs from that landscape,” he said.

“But I think there may be something that can be included that is a little more specific to SMSFs.”

Mr Dunn said that historically there has been legislation that has been “carved out very specifically for SMSFs” such as the non-arm’s length expenditure in 2023.

“So there’s certainly elements that the government, when we look back, appear to be trying to disincentivise SMSFs but in this instance, I think there is an opportunity to look at the positive elements of this and see whether they can apply,” he said.

“However, we can’t really try and put a square peg into a round hole as some of the retirement income covenants would potentially do.”

He added the ATO is already including the importance of setting up an exit plan in its guidance on establishing an SMSF.

“In the SMSF sector we are already identifying things around what to do in succession planning and the event of death and making sure all these elements are tied up, not waiting for it to happen, but planning for these things well in advance,” he said.

“I think there’s an opportunity for the sector to formalise those in some way, but the language is already fairly embedded into the industry because we have so many Australians in self-managed funds that are in that baby boomer and later stage of life.”

Tags: Estate PlanningNewsRetirement IncomeSuperannuation

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Comments 1

  1. Kym Bailey says:
    2 years ago

    Real care is required here so we don’t end up in the same parlous state caused by allowing defined benefit pensions in a SMSF. We are still waiting on the “exit strategy” for legacy pensions that became redundant due to legislative changes that failed to allow for a restructure at the time. Let’s not repeat the mistakes of the past.
    A SMSF can only have a maximum of 6 members, few have more than 2. The use of reserves isn’t allowed so a member has a close affinity with the overall capital in the fund. So the potential here would be that the trustee purchases a product with the member as a the beneficial owner, similar to a life policy. If the members dies, any residual is payable as a death benefit. The sticking point would be if the member leaves the fund, will the product be portable? Will ownership be able to be assigned to the member? These are the pressing issues that need to be thought through for SMSF viability into these constructed products.
    A person who joins a SMSF is very interested in their retirement savings and presumably their retirement outcomes. The need for the not so “invisible hand” is less apparent in a SMSF. If the government believes people are hording super rather than spending, increase the drawdown rates, as an option, or even change the formula used to calculate annual drawdowns. There is often more than one way to “solve” perceived problems.

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