Super maze - lump sum or income stream?

Super maze - lump sum or income stream?
Jonathan ChancellorDecember 7, 2020

The Productivity Commission has found no evidence of Australians exploiting superannuation - blowing their hard earned life savings when they retire and then moving onto a taxpayer funded pension.

The commission has also found raising the age at which people access their super to 65 years would boost federal government coffers mid-century by about $7 billion a year in today's money.

Delaying by two years the age at which people dip into their superannuation would also leave them with a balance at least 10% larger when they get to retire.

Around 30% of people currently opt to take their benefits early as a lump sum.

More than 70% take as an income stream.
 
The commission found almost no evidence that retirees and their financial planners were aggressively restructuring their affairs to tap into the pension.
 
But the finding comes as age pension reforms, set for January 2017 introduction, creates perverse incentives for retirees to reduce their assets to maintain or secure CentreLink payments, as the Australian Financial Review personal finance and superannuation editor Sally Patten has noted.
 

Jonathan Chancellor

Jonathan Chancellor is one of Australia's most respected property journalists, having been at the top of the game since the early 1980s. Jonathan co-founded the property industry website Property Observer and has written for national and international publications.

Editor's Picks

How first home buyers can still get into the off the plan apartment market in the Gold Coast
Hamton given green light for $550 million masterplan on former University of Melbourne site in Hawthorn
City Beat September 2024: Gold Coast unit median tips over $800,000
Markets price in four RBA rate cuts in next 12 months: What it means for the off the plan apartment market
Inside First Light: South Melbourne's newest apartment development shaped by French architects and celebrated restaurateurs