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  • Lump sum superannuation to end REPORT

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    Main | News > Lump sum superannuation to end
    25th Mar 2015
    Lump sum superannuation to end
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    Leon Della Bosca

    According to recommendations made by the Treasury’s Financial System Inquiry, Australians entering retirement are likely to be prevented from taking their superannuation in one lump sum and will instead have it made available to them in a self-funded ‘pension’ styled income stream.

    And Treasury Chief Operating Officer John Lonsdale believes that the inquiry’s plans to overhaul the current system of superannuation are more than likely to proceed.

    “Superannuation trustees should be cautiously optimistic that the framework will go towards something like what is outlined by the inquiry. That said there are still a lot of details that need to be understood,” said Mr Lonsdale.

    The inquiry, designed to lay out a blueprint for the financial system over the next decade, was given to government for consideration in December, and proposed that retirees, once they’ve reach the age of retirement, should not be given unbridled access to their superannuation savings in one lump sum.

    Instead, the inquiry suggests that superannuation savings should be transferred to a managed fund, with the purpose of providing a more lasting stream of income throughout retirees’ later years.

    The proposed change would better align the default fund allocation and settings which are applied to compulsory super contributions during the accumulation phase.

    The inquiry’s recommendations to strengthen the superannuation system aim to:

    Set a clear objective for the superannuation system to provide income in retirement.
    Improve long-term net returns for members by introducing a formal competitive process to allocate new workforce entrants to high-performing superannuation funds, unless the Stronger Super reforms prove effective.
    Meet the needs of retirees better by requiring superannuation trustees to pre-select a comprehensive income product in retirement for members to receive their benefits, unless members choose to take their benefits in another way.
    These recommendations seek to improve the outcomes for superannuation fund members and help Australia to manage the challenges of an ageing population.

    The findings of the report highlight increasing pressure on the government to fund an aged pension system along with other costs required to support an ageing population.

    The inquiry’s suggestions have been backed by many investment and superannuation specialists, most of whom feel that a default option for managing the retirement phase of superannuation is truly in the best interest of consumers. It is hoped that a default pension fund would provide a better outcome for people who don’t have access to good quality financial advice.

    “Expecting a 65-year-old who has never managed a bucket of money before to suddenly know how to do so is exposing them to too much risk,” says Superannuation Consumers Centre Chairwoman Jenni Mack.

    How do you feel about such a move? Would you be happy receiving your superannuation as a managed income stream, rather then risking your hard-earned savings on investments that may not deliver? Or are you happy with the current lump sum situation? Why not tell us what you think?

    Read more about this at The Age.

    Read the Financial System Inquiry report.
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    Tags: superannuation, retirement, pension, finance, asic, financial system inquiry,
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  • You can’t handle the data ALYCIA GET UP

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    Alycia – GetUp!

    6:43 PM (1 hour ago)

    to me
    Go dark

    NEVILLE –

    It’s happening. The Government’s data retention scheme looks set to pass the Senate tonight, with Labor’s support. If this happens, it’s a terrible outcome for Australians, and the media and whistleblowers who keep us informed.

    This scheme is rushed, costly, ineffective, and against the public interest. A lazy amendment from the ALP – purportedly to prevent this dodgy data bill from having a freezing effect on the media – has as many holes in it as a slice of Swiss cheese. It leaves journalists and whistleblowers largely unprotected,1 and will see every one of us treated as a potential suspect. Essentially, it punishes the wrong people. But as the Government and Labor team up to rush the legislation through the Senate, we have a way of getting their attention by illustrating just how problematic this bill really is.

    Can you join us in ‘going dark’ against data retention tomorrow to protest the Government’s dangerous and ineffective scheme?

    The message we’re sending is clear. In its haste to rush these broad sweeping laws, the Government’s costly scheme has targeted all of us while ignoring just how easy it is to circumvent data retention. The truth is, anyone who wants to protect their privacy (yes, this includes people with something to hide) has a huge range of perfectly legal options to do so, including simply avoiding Australian service providers. Now that’s just bad for business!

    The impact of this is that Australians familiar with technology will easily be able to protect their data, while those that aren’t as comfortable with newer technology will bear the brunt of the risks associated with data retention.

    Across Australia tomorrow, citizens will be showing the government and Labor that this law will be another costly white elephant that doesn’t make us any safer.

    Click here to sign up and learn how to go dark: http://www.getup.org.au/dark

    Alycia, for the GetUp team.

    PS: If you’ve just got a moment, change your Facebook and Twitter profile picture to this image to help spread the word.

    PPS: Even the Government’s Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull understands how important metadata is and how easy it is to avoid scrutiny. He has fessed up to using an instant messaging app which avoids retention, and joked last year that private networks (VPNs) could be used to circumvent data retention laws. By contrast, our Prime Minister recalls never being that worried about metadata back when he was a journalist in the 1980’s… at a time that pre-dated widespread internet and mobile phone use.2 Go figure!

    References

    [1] Data retention plan amended for journalists, but is it enough? The Conversation, 20th March 2015.
    [2] Data retention: Journalists’ union labels Tony Abbott’s defence of metadata protections ‘ludicrous’, ABC News, Wednesday 18th March 2015.

  • Abbott’s cutting pensions Jenny Macklin LABOR

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    Abbott’s cutting pensions

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    Jenny Macklin via sendgrid.info 

    5:08 PM (48 minutes ago)

    to me
    .
    Neville,

    If Tony Abbott gets his way, the indexation of the pension will be slashed and Australia will have the highest retirement age in the world.

    Tony Abbott’s cuts risk pushing millions of pensioners into poverty.

    According to the Australian Council of Social Services, Tony Abbott’s changes to indexation alone will mean pensioners will be as much as $80 a week worse off within ten years.

    We need to make it clear to Tony Abbott and the Liberals that we won’t stand by while they launch a full scale attack on pensions.

    Can you sign our petition and tell Tony Abbott don’t pocket our pension? 

    Tony Abbott promised before the election “no changes to pensions” – the facts show that this is just not true.

    At the same time, Tony Abbott is imposing new taxes on fuel and medicine that will drive up the cost of living for Australian pensioners.

    It’s just not good enough. You and I need to make it clear to the Government – Australians won’t take these unfair cuts lying down. 

    Sign our petition today and add your name to the list of Australians standing up for pensioners.

    We know when we stand together that we can make a difference and that means every single signature counts. Join me and add yours today.

    Thanks for your support,

    Jenny Macklin
    Shadow Minister for Families and Payments

  • IF ALL THE ICE MELTED. Explore the world’s new coastlines if sea level rises 216 feet.

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    The collapsing Antarctic ice sheet, by itself, will cause #SeaLevelRise over 10′

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    Neville Gillmore
    The collapsing Antarctic ice sheet, by itself, will cause #SeaLevelRise over …
    3:26 PM (2 hours ago)

    John James

    4:16 PM (1 hour ago)

    to me

    IF ALL THE ICE MELTED. Explore the world’s new coastlines if sea level rises 216 feet.

    On 23/03/15 3:26 PM, “Neville Gillmore” <nevilleg729@gmail.com> wrote:
    The collapsing Antarctic ice sheet, by itself, will cause #SeaLevelRise over 10′ but #Florida still builds on coast ? environmentalhealthnews.org/t/-73253697870…
  • Monstrous melt: Distant Antarctica glaciers have scientists worried

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    Monstrous melt: Distant Antarctica glaciers have scientists worried
    March 22, 2015 12:00 AM
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    By the Editorial Board

    The great ice sheet of West Antarctica has begun sliding into what scientists believe is an irreversible collapse. It will take a century, but once glaciers that took tens of thousands of years to form are gone, the absence will result in a sea level rise in the Northern Hemisphere of at least 10 feet.

    If this were the only scenario to worry about, it would be more than enough to qualify as a catastrophe. Unfortunately, West Antarctica isn’t the only ice formation that may disappear from the bottom of the world.

    A glacier in East Antarctica is also melting. It, too, could affect the sea levels of North America in ways that will cause residents of the hemisphere to regret that climate change deniers were ever taken seriously.

    According to a new paper in Nature Geoscience by an international team of scientists, the Totten Glacier of East Antarctica is the fastest-thinning sector of the world’s largest ice sheet. The study said its rapid erosion is the result of warm ocean water flowing beneath it. Because it holds back even more glaciers, they will slip more quickly into the ocean.

    While global warming remains debatable only among those determined to save the energy sector from further regulation, the evidence that fossil fuel consumption is having a disastrous impact on the environment is irrefutable. The amount of ice that the Totten Glacier is losing every day to nearby warm waters is “equivalent to 100 times the volume of Sydney Harbor every year,” said the Australian Antarctic Division, which helped craft the paper.

    Those in Congress and in industries that oppose addressing this problem will be dead before their disregard of scientific consensus has been definitively refuted. It’s their grandchildren who will inherit a world where the weather is more chaotic and Antarctica is on its way to becoming an open sea.

    Meet the Editorial Board.

  • [New post] NSW 2015 – the final week BEN RAUE The Taklly Room

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    [New post] NSW 2015 – the final week

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    The Tally Room <donotreply@wordpress.com>

    10:30 AM (18 minutes ago)

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    New post on The Tally Room

    NSW 2015 – the final week

    by Ben Raue

    With five days to go until election day, you can now read through the entirety of the Tally Room guide to the NSW state election.

    Profiles of all 93 seats are now available, including final lists of candidates. Most seats now feature comment threads discussing that electorate, and everyone is welcome to join in!

    In addition, I have written a guide to the Legislative Council, as well as a summary of NSW political history, a summary of the last four years in NSW politics, a summary of the recent redistribution, and an article going through the key seats in the election.

    I appeared on FBI Radio’s Backchat program again on Saturday morning to discuss optional preferential voting, and I’ll be on the show again on election morning. I’ll also be joining 2SER’s Election Nerds from 7pm to 9pm on election night, and I’m also going to be appearing on Radio National later this week (more details to come).

    Meanwhile, we have seen a number of polls released in the last few days. An Ipsos poll yesterday had the Coalition leading 54-46 over Labor. In addition, Reachtel has released three polls showing Labor leading in Ballina, Newtown and Strathfield.

    You can use this post as an open thread to discuss the state election, as we enter the final week.

    Ben Raue | March 23, 2015 at 9:30 am | Tags: New South Wales 2015 | Categories: Uncategorized | URL: http://wp.me/ppI95-6Mx