logo
The big change to superannuation 'all young Aussies' should fear

The big change to superannuation 'all young Aussies' should fear

Daily Mail​a day ago

Millionaire and entrepreneur Mark Bouris has warned young Australians will be the hardest hit by Labor's proposed tax hike on superannuation.
The Albanese government plans to double the tax on superannuation balances above $3million from 15 to 30 per cent from July 1.
Labor expects the hike, which will also apply to unrealised gains, to only affect an estimated 80,000 people or 0.5 per cent of the population.
Mr Bouris said young Australians should be wary of the proposal given they stand to be denied the same tax conditions that benefited older generations.
'Every young person in the country should be worried about this, and I'll tell you why,' he said on his Mentored Plus podcast.
'Because every old person in the country has experienced building their superannuation up with only 15 per cent tax rate from day one, for the last 30, 40 years.
'We've had this, all of us had this fantastic low-tax situation with the money we earn in our super fund,' he said, adding young people 'will not have the same benefits'.
Bouris dismissed the idea that young people stand to gain as older Aussies look to withdraw and gift their savings to avoid paying the higher tax.
'If you're a young person now and you're saying: "Oh this is great, because the rich people are going to transfer the wealth across to the younger people", you will be transferring it to your kids and it's going to keep going like that forever.'
Mr Bouris said former Prime Minister Paul Keating, who oversaw the introduction of compulsory superannuation in Australia, must feel 'completely demoralised'.
'All this is going to do is put more strain on the government because people are not going to retire with enough money because they're paying too much tax,' he said.
The Greens want the threshold to be lowered to $2million and indexed to inflation while deputy Liberal leader Ted O'Brien has ruled out any compromise.
O'Brien suggested the Coalition would be open to a deal on the tax hike if Labor agreed not to tax unrealised gains - but has since taken a harder approach.
'Labor's super tax - it's super big, it's super bad. It flies in the face of what we believe as a Coalition,' O'Brien told Sky News last week.
'We will definitely, as a Coalition, oppose this unfair super tax of Labor's every step of way. Every step of the way.'
The 30 per cent tax rate would only apply to the value of a super account over a $3million threshold, while the 15 per cent rate would continue below that amount.
Industry groups have warned the threshold, which will not be indexed to inflation, will capture an increasing number of Aussies in line with rising costs and wages.
Modelling from Treasury and the Grattan Institute estimated one in ten Australians will have super balances over $3million by the 2050s.
Treasurer Jim Chalmers last week said the proposal had undergone multiple rounds of consultation and would not undermine superannuation tax concessions.
'We provided years of opportunities for people to suggest different ways to calculate that liability and nobody has been able to come up with one,' he said.
Labor, which does not have a majority in the Senate, will need to work with the Greens or the Coalition to get the proposal over the line.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man dies two weeks after arrest in Adelaide as police investigate incident as death in custody
Man dies two weeks after arrest in Adelaide as police investigate incident as death in custody

The Guardian

time35 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Man dies two weeks after arrest in Adelaide as police investigate incident as death in custody

A 42-year-old man has died in an Adelaide hospital in what is being treated as a death in police custody. Guarav Kundi was arrested in the Adelaide suburb of Royston Park in the early hours of 29 May, according to South Australian police. Police said he died on Friday at Royal Adelaide hospital, two weeks after the incident. In a statement, SA police said Kundi's death would be investigated as a death in police custody. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email The major crime investigation branch will investigate the cause and circumstances of his death and prepare a report for the coroner, while the office of public integrity has independent oversight of the investigation into the conduct of police officers involved in the incident. A commissioner's inquiry into the incident was announced on 3 June, the statement said. The senior investigating officer conducting the inquiry has reviewed body worn vision. 'It has been confirmed that at no time was a knee applied to Mr Kundi's neck. His head was not forced into the car or roadway at any point,' the statement said. 'However, the use of restraints during this incident will be closely examined during the Commissioner's Inquiry.' SA police have briefed the Indian consulate on the incident and investigation and will continue to update the consulate on developments. Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion The foreign minister, Penny Wong, was asked whether the incident would damage India-Australia relations at a press conference on Friday. 'I would say to the Indian community here in Australia and the broader Indian community, this is an investigation that will be done properly,' Wong said. 'Be assured of our friendship certainly with India, but also the importance of the Indian diaspora here in Australia.' Anne Aly, the minister for multicultural affairs, said 'trust between people of migrant background and the institutions that govern them, including the police' is 'something that contributes to social cohesion'.

Sinking feeling as Adelaide Advertiser chooses wrong week to run Aukus submarines sponsored series
Sinking feeling as Adelaide Advertiser chooses wrong week to run Aukus submarines sponsored series

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Sinking feeling as Adelaide Advertiser chooses wrong week to run Aukus submarines sponsored series

Editors at Murdoch's South Australian masthead, the Advertiser, could not have imagined that hours after they published the first instalment of a major advertising series, Defending Australia, the Trump administration would announce a review of Aukus. Sponsors for the series included the South Australian government, ASC, Babcock, BAE Systems, Hanwha Defence Australia, KBR and Deloitte. The acres of print coverage about building submarines in the state was to culminate in a summit in Canberra's Parliament House on Monday 16 June. Apart from defending Australia, the focus of the series was finding skilled workers for 'Australia's biggest-ever project, Aukus nuclear-powered submarines'. On Thursday the 'Tiser ran a double page spread about plans for a $2bn transformation of the Osborne Naval Shipyard into the world's 'most advanced manufacturing centre' for the Aukus program. The stories were pre-written and spruiked plans for nuclear submarine construction, complete with maps and diagrams and interviews with defence boffins. Friday's paper went ahead with the eight-page Defending Australia lift-out but its front page acknowledged the roadblock with a big stamp saying 'Under Review' and it reported that the future of our nuclear submarine deal with the US is in doubt. It was a public relations coup for the Australia-Israel and Jewish Affairs Council (AIJAC). The three journalists the lobby group took to Israel were so enthused by the experience that they all wrote long features upon return: the three main pieces totalled 10,000 words. While these sponsored trips are an annual occurrence, attended by journalists across the media industry, this year's comes at a time when the relationship between Australia and Israel is more fraught than ever. In The Australian, which sent two journalists on the sponsored trip, Paul Kelly's article in the weekend paper came in at just under 5,000 words. He followed that up with an appearance on Sky News Australia with Sharri Markson in which he reflected on his visit. The editor-at-large was one of a media delegation that visited Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, as well as the sites of Hamas's 7 October 2023 attack. Among the dignitaries lined up to speak was Israel's president, Isaac Herzog, families of IDF troops fighting in Gaza and survivors of the Nova music festival. Kelly's colleague, Chris Kenny, wrote a 2,500 word feature and also provided live crosses on Sky News, where he has his own program. 'This is the diabolic dilemma deliberately created by Hamas,' Kenny wrote. 'Every time Israel is criticised for its actions in Gaza, Hamas scores a propaganda win. The deaths of Palestinian civilians are central to the Hamas strategy. That is why Hamas shelters underground in its extensive tunnel network, leaving Gazan civilians above ground and exposed.' Michael Stutchbury, the outgoing editor-at-large of the Australian Financial Review, filed a news story from Israel and last week reported on the accusations he heard while there of 'betrayal' and 'backstabbing' by the Australian government in a 2,500 word feature. All three men disclosed the trip was hosted by AIJAC at the end of their articles. AIJAC has not responded to a request for comment. With a criminal trial involving mushrooms dominating the news cycle it's no surprise the Daily Telegraph devoted its front page to the fungi on Wednesday. Or was it? The exclusive story Magic Mushrooms Found Growing at State Parliament had nothing to do with the Erin Patterson triple murder trial but was a stunt handed on a plate to the tabloid by the Legalise Cannabis party MP, Jeremy Buckingham. 'A crop of illegal drugs sprang up at NSW parliament last week, metres away from unsuspecting NSW police special constables,' state political editor James Doherty wrote. He followed up his remarkable yarn with a video. 'Psychedelic 'magic' mushrooms started growing outside the main entrance to Australia's oldest parliament after a period of heavy rain, right under the noses of state politicians, bureaucrats and law enforcement.' The point of this story was lost on some of the Tele readers too, with one commenting: 'So a naturally occurring fungi, whose spores are wind blown, are growing in the gardens of the NSW Parliament House. I have probably had these growing in my yard under the right conditions. What will become a news story next? Breaking news, there are sharks in the waters around Mrs Macquarie's Chair.' Buckingham told Weekly Beast he wanted to publicise what he sees as the excessive penalty for magic mushroom possession and he approached the Tele. He made clear that he spotted the mushrooms growing near the stairs and he did not plant them there. Should anyone accuse the Tele of handling illegal drugs, Doherty reported that 'following consultations with authorities, the Telegraph handed the samples over to NSW police for appropriate disposal'. ABC News has named one of its cadetship positions in honour of Antony Green – who has taken on the grand title election analyst emeritus – the managing director, Hugh Marks, announced at an event at Ultimo last week. It will be awarded each year to a cadet specialising in data analysis, statistics, mathematics or AI skills. Following Green's retirement after 90 elections, Casey Briggs is now the ABC's chief election and data analyst. Briggs's first Australian election in the new role will be the upcoming Tasmanian poll. Green has revealed he is donating three decades' worth of his personal comprehensive election guides to the National Library of Australia so they can be preserved in perpetuity. The self-regulatory watchdog for advertising, Ad Standards, has found an Australian Gas Networks (AGN) advertisement which ran on Ten's MasterChef Australia breached environmental advertising standards and has been taken off air. The ad said: 'It's not just the innovative dishes that come out of this kitchen that will surprise you, it's also the gas. The MasterChef kitchen is cooking with renewable gas again, and at AGN we're working towards a future where renewable gas could one day be used in your kitchen. With all the control you love'. In its ruling, Ad Standards said the claim was 'vague and does not make it clear that the plan to fully transition to renewable gas, sourced from hydrogen and biomethane, is not expected to be realised until 2050'. Last year environmentalists accused the hit reality TV show of greenwashing after Ten announced sponsorship deals with AGN, a subsidiary of Australian Gas Infrastructure Group, which delivers gas to more than 2m homes and businesses. Environment Victoria, which lodged the complaint, told Weekly Beast: 'We are pleased that Ad Standards have vindicated the call to expose the misinformation and false solutions from the Australian Gas Networks'. Founder of climate communications charity, Comms Declare, Belinda Noble said AGN had been found to have repeatedly breached ad standards on the subject. 'Australian consumers are still being duped into thinking that fossil gas is a climate solution.' The ABC 7.30 host Sarah Ferguson told viewers on Thursday's program that Jacob Greber would replace Laura Tingle as political editor. A former Australian Financial Review economics and US correspondent, Greber only joined the ABC as chief digital political correspondent a year ago, but his story-breaking and analysis skills have impressed. Greber, who takes up the new role on 7 July, paid tribute to Tingle, now the ABC's global affairs editor as 'an absolute class act and fearless force of nature'. 'I'm humbled and thrilled to pick up where she's left off,' he said.

Credit Suisse was ‘warned' about Greensill three years before firm collapsed
Credit Suisse was ‘warned' about Greensill three years before firm collapsed

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Credit Suisse was ‘warned' about Greensill three years before firm collapsed

Bosses at Credit Suisse were warned against dealing with the Australian financier Lex Greensill's eponymous company three years before the collapse of his Greensill Capital, which once employed the former UK prime minister David Cameron as an adviser. The 'character judgment' of senior Credit Suisse managers was challenged in anonymous messages they received as early as 2018, which raised concerns over the Swiss bank's dealings with Greensill, according to a report by the Swiss regulator Finma, released under a London court order after a request by the Guardian and other media. The document showed senior managers were warned several times about the risks involved in its business dealings with Greensill and his firm, the 2021 collapse of which contributed to Credit Suisse's shocking demise in March 2023. A message from an anonymous tipster raised 'strong doubts' over the bank's strategy of packaging up Greensill's loans into $10bn (£7.4bn) worth of investable funds for wealthy clients. Greensill appeared at the high court in London this week as a witness in a month-long trial, in which a former Credit Suisse fund is suing the Japanese tech investor SoftBank for $440m over a complex deal it allegedly coordinated with Greensill Capital before its collapse. The Finma report, released as part of the trial, detailed the messages sent to Credit Suisse managers. 'We also have serious doubts about your character judgment in choosing Greensill Capital as a partner in this field, and even more so in giving them the degree of discretion over your clients' money which they appear to have,' the message said. The tipster was also concerned that a 'large proportion' of those loans were to companies in the metals magnate Sanjeev Gupta's troubled steel empire. The message added that the recent collapse of another set of Greensill-backed funds offered by rival asset manager GAM 'should be taken as a strong warning … you need to take care'. One senior manager forwarded the 2018 tipoff to Lex Greensill, adding: 'People in CS are receiving anonymous mails … seriously, you have to rethink your communication strategy!' Greensill Capital, founded in 2011, offered corporate loans, giving companies advances on their invoices in exchange for a fee. But its founder, the Australian melon farmer turned City banker, entered into a series of complex financial agreements and marketed his lender as a tech firm stacked with high-profile advisers including Cameron. Greensill went on to attract a series of large investors including General Atlantic and SoftBank, whose investments were purportedly meant to expand Greensill's activities. 'However, as it later turned out, these funds were primarily used to pay out private investors and to provide Greensill Bank, which was increasingly coming under regulatory scrutiny, with additional capital,' the Finma report stated. 'Under the management of Lex Greensill, the company provide[d] customised suits for its employees, elegant business premises and its own fleet of business jets.' Finma's report, which was compiled in December 2022 after nearly two years of investigations, showed Credit Suisse bosses continued to receive warnings over their dealings with Greensill as late as June 2019. Greensill was, at the time, still on the rise and had hoped to launch a £22bn stock market flotation before the Covid pandemic put its clients and investors under severe financial strain. Sign up to Business Today Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning after newsletter promotion Greensill eventually collapsed in March 2021, after insurers refused to renew contracts that underpinned its loans. It came amid growing concern over the firm's management and its outsized exposure to Gupta's metals empire, which ultimately sparked a string of financial and political scandals. It forced Credit Suisse to close its $10bn Greensill-backed funds, leaving wealthy customers nursing hundreds of millions of dollars worth of losses and further eroding confidence in Credit Suisse. That led the Swiss regulator, Finma, to launch what became a near two-year investigation into its dealings with Greensill. The full resulting Finma report was never previously released. But key findings, released in February 2023, declared that Credit Suisse 'seriously breached its supervisory obligations' and would face additional oversight for senior managers and important business relationships. The 167-year-old bank collapsed a month later, leading to its emergency rescue by rival UBS. UBS is still trying to recoup money for former investors of the Greensill-backed Credit Suisse funds. Commenting on the Finma report, UBS said: 'This is a legacy Credit Suisse matter. The conduct described in the report pre-dates UBS's acquisition of Credit Suisse.' A representative for Lex Greensill declined to comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store