Super tax system favours well-off males

superannuation AIST WIS ISA women's wealth

30 July 2015
| By Jassmyn |
image
image
expand image

The existing heavy weighting of tax concessions to high income earners is a key factor behind the gender gap in retirement savings, according to two superannuation bodies.

The Australian Institute of Superannuation Trustees (AIST) and Women in Super (WIS) have urged the Government to prioritise the tax reform of superannuation as the Senate reviews the retirement savings gap for women in its tax inquiry.

AIST chief executive, Tom Garcia, said the inquiry needed to consider fairer distribution of tax concessions in super to improve the outlook for women.

"The reality is, the system as it stands currently is stacked in favour of high income earning, well-off males," Garcia said.

WIS chair, Cate Wood, said it was ironic that the only super tax change supported by the Government was to increase the tax paid by low income earners by withdrawing the Low Income Super Contribution (LISC).

"Women have longer life expectancies and so need more savings to last longer. Greater equity in super taxation concessions and special measures are required to compensate for women's diminished savings opportunities due to their workforce experience," Wood said.

"Despite more than 20 years of compulsory super, we're still seeing women retiring with just over half the savings of men. There is no silver bullet; this is a complex and multi-layered problem which needs a collaborative, bipartisan effort to address it."

Also welcoming the inquiry on women's super was Industry Super Australia (ISA) that said the current 19 per cent pay gap between women and men's wages translates into a super gap of 47 per cent.

ISA deputy chief executive, Robbie Campo, said even with a fully mature super system 63 per cent of single women could not retire comfortably by 2055 unless something was done now to rebalance the retirement income system.

"The absurdly harsh asset test taper that was recently introduced has the potential to swallow up the benefit of any new measures aimed at improving superannuation savings for women," she said.

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Recommended for you

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

MARKET INSIGHTS

Completely agree Peter. The definition of 'significant change is circumstances relevant to the scope of the advice' is s...

1 month 3 weeks ago

This verdict highlights something deeply wrong and rotten at the heart of the FSCP. We are witnessing a heavy-handed, op...

2 months ago

Interesting. Would be good to know the details of the StrategyOne deal....

2 months ago

SuperRatings has shared the median estimated return for balanced superannuation funds for the calendar year 2024, finding the year achieved “strong and consistent positiv...

2 weeks 2 days ago

Original bidder Bain Capital, which saw its first offer rejected in December, has returned with a revised bid for Insignia Financial....

1 week 2 days ago

The FAAA has secured CSLR-related documents under the FOI process, after an extended four-month wait, which show little analysis was done on how the scheme’s cost would a...

1 week ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS