The Australian Institute of Superannuation Trustees (AIST) has strongly reiterated its view that superannuation should not be used to help first-home buyers enter the housing market.
Amid continuing speculation that the Federal Government is contemplating opening the way for the use of super by first home-buyers, AIST chief executive, Eva Scheerlinck warned that such a move would simply drive prices higher while leading to poorer retirement outcomes for young people.
“Tapping into super is completely counter to the Government’s own objective for super,” she said. “The purpose of super is to enhance people’s capacity to support themselves in retirement, not to throw money at the housing crisis and further drive up prices.”
The AIST pointed to work recent undertaken by independent economist, Saul Eslake warning that tapping into super to buy a home would most likely see young people left worse off financially.
“Australia’s deteriorating housing affordability is a complex problem that requires a credible policy framework rather than short-term, flawed thinking, which could actually make the problem worse,” Scheerlinck said.
She said the Government needed to consider a range of measures to improve housing outcomes, including measures to facilitate investment by superannuation funds into the social housing market.
“AIST is encouraged that the Government recognises the need for more social housing, however it also needs to recognise that such investments need to have appropriate levels of government support for them to be viable,” Scheerlinck said.
Industry Super Australia (ISA) also supported superannuation fund investment in social housing but dismissed outright suggestions that super could be used by first home-buyers to finance their homes.
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The fund has expanded its corporate superannuation solutions to partner with Australian businesses of all sizes.
The chief executive of Aware Super anticipates a significant shift in how ESG factors will influence portfolio values in the next six years, surpassing the changes witnessed in the past two decades.
In a recent statement, shadow assistant minister for home ownership and Liberal senator for NSW, Andrew Bragg, accused ‘big super’ of fabricating data attributed to the Reserve Bank of Australia to push their agenda.
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