By Helen Hodgson, Curtin University
The government’s Retirement Income Review paints an encouraging picture of the finances of retired Australians.
Most are at least as well off in retirement as they were while working, and most are more financially satisfied and less financially-stressed than Australians of working age.
But not all. The huge exception is retirees who do not own their own homes.
Whereas very few retired home owners are in poverty, most retired renters are.
Income poverty rates of retirees
Source: Analysis of ABS Survey of Income and Housing Confidentialised Unit Record File, 2017-18
So bad is the divide, the review found that even a 40% increase in Commonwealth Rent Assistance (the payment for pensioners) would reduce financial stress among renters by only 1%.
This is because rent assistance is low, covering only about 13% of the cost of renting.
Retirees who own their own homes don’t have to pay rent (and can still get the pension should their wealth be tied up in their home), and have a source of wealth that usually eclipses both their own superannuation and the wealth of renters.
Equivalised household wealth by asset type, for retirees
Most people do not regard their home as a retirement asset, a view compounded by rules that exempt it from taxes and the pension assets test.
They are also reluctant to borrow against the value of their home using facilities such as the Pension Loans Scheme, for the same reasons they are reluctant to touch any of the wealth they retire with.
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Data provided to the review by a large super fund shows its members typically die with 90% of what they had at retirement.
Most retirees don’t use what they’ve got
Another study finds age pensioners die with about 90% of what they had on retirement.
Partly the reasons are psychological. The review says words such as “investments”, “savings” and “nest eggs” imply the assets aren’t for living on.
Before compulsory super, employer-sponsored schemes usually paid “defined” benefits that could be measured in terms of income per year.
In the new system, designed to break the connection between workers and specific employers, benefits were “accumulated” in funds that could most easily be measured by the amount in them.
It is difficult for most people to see how a lump sum converts into income stream, and even more difficult when it depends on the interaction with the pension.
Another reason retirees hang on to what they had on retirement might be a genuine (if misplaced) concern about the unexpected.
In fact, health and aged care costs are heavily subsidised. Most people’s spending on them doesn’t increase significantly throughout retirement, yet many people seem unaware of how little of their own funds they will need.
Partly this is because of the complexity of the aged care and health care systems and how poorly they are explained.
It’s created two systems
Providing help to retirees who actually need it (mainly renters, many of them single women) and getting people with assets in the form of superannuation, savings and housing to actually use them rather than pass them on in bequests are the two key challenges identified in the report.
They are problems that boosting the rate of compulsory super contributions (as pushed for by the funds and presently leglislated) won’t help with.
They are set to become worse.
Although home ownership rates remain high for people over the age of 65, a growing number of Australians are not entering the housing market.
Over 15 years, the number of Australians over 65 who do not own their home outright is expected to double.
As the amount in super funds grows (boosted by the legislated increase in compulsory contributions, should it take place), Australians with super are going to have even more relative to what they need and even less need to make use of it.
The report makes no recommendations, and doesn’t suggest that the solutions are easy.
Widening the pension asset test to include the home would leave many homeowners worse off and could generate distrust and destabilise the system.
Getting more Australians into home ownership has proved difficult and could never be a solution for all Australians, in any case.
We already have in place rules that require retirees to draw down their super, but often they withdraw the minimum amount permitted and then reinvest much of it in another savings vehicle outside of super.
We’ve created a system where most have enough or more than enough to retire on and others get nothing like enough.
Helen Hodgson, Professor, Curtin Law School and Curtin Business School, Curtin University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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Hi Helen, I offer you my situation and many of my friends are in a similar situation. I am basically in “no mans land” and don’t know what to do. I am 57 my wife is 47. We have two dependent children aged 4 and 13. Due to COVID-19 I lost my job of 22 years and my wife has lost hers after 8 years. We do not own our home and have moved to Perth to be with supported family and cheaper rent of 450 per week. After my redundancy payment we have no debt and 60000 to last. I have 450000 in super and would like to at least try and buy an apartment to at least have security of a roof over our head but can’t touch this money. My wife gets approx. 700 per fortnight from family assistance and I get nothing. This is the first time ever in my life I have received money from the government. My wife has about 10000 in her super. I get no other work keeper or work seeker payments. I have applied for 10 jobs in 2 months and nobody wants an old over qualified has been. The system and the government has let me down now that I have been thrown on the scrap heap and for a person who takes pride in not taking money from the government and can’t touch my super without heavy tax implications what am I supposed to do? Yes the system needs to be fixed
Helen, superannuation is a rort. It is not a retirement fund. It is a moneymaking exercise for the Unions and Labor and one of the biggest employers in Austrmalia. In the words of Simon Crean in 1981 to the National Press Club “superannuation is the first step towards socialism”. Scrap compulsory super. Make it voluntary, cut the tax breaks for those who contribute to it, give everyone a 9.5% wage rise (atm) and allow Australians to withdraw THEIR money to buy a home. All pensions could be doubled without a further hit to the Federal Budget and everyone, and I repeat everyone, would have a more sustainable living allowance in retirement and during their working life. Please write an article about Trustees of Industry Funds having the ability to ignore a nomination and Will and pay your Superannuation and Death Benefit to someone else even tho there is no marriage, no engagement, no children biological or step, no shared mortgage, no shared bank account, no shared bills and less than 2 yrs knowing each other. $213,000. Nice little earner! Tell all of this to people who put theur money into this ponzi scheme. I have been asking REST for 18 months what the Trustee based this on under 10.1 of the SIS Act and 25D of the Acts Interpretation Act and still silence. Zilch. I’ve been to ASIC, APRA (both helpful but still no answer) and AFCA when eventually REST stated to AFCA it would be contrary to the privacy of the person who received my son’s Super and Death Benefit. REST don’t contribute to funeral costs even tho the only money the deceased has is in Super, doesn’t pay any Super or DB to beneficiaries (even with no dispute) for 6 months. I could go on and on… just let the public know once it goes into the black hole calked Superannuation you lose control particularly with Industry Funds.