Industry Super Australia (ISA) thinks a proposed government-run super fund would be rife for pork-barrelling and will “dud” workers out of thousands of dollars.
Its modelling showed that a 30-year-old worker in such a government-run fund would pay exorbitant fees, earn lower investment returns and end up $126,000 worse off at retirement compared with being in a top-performing industry fund.
“This plan would funnel millions of Australian workers into an expensive and poor performing government-controlled super fund – all so politicians can get their hands on people’s money,” ISA chief executive, Bernie Dean, said.
Earlier this year, Liberal senator Andrew Bragg reignited the national fund debate when he said the Government should “take its responsibilities more seriously” by making the Future Fund the default fund.
If the government-run fund was to go ahead, new workers would be entered into it by default unless they opted to join a different fund.
ISA said their modelling reinforced earlier evidence from the Productivity Commission (PC) that a government-run super fund would be prone to political interference and riddled with conflicts of interest.
“With almost unchecked power to spend workers’ savings, [the Government] could find it hard to resist ladling out money for pork barrels in marginal seats, all for the purpose of chasing votes rather than good investment returns,” ISA said.
According to ISA, political ideology could also trump the financial interest of members especially when a government makes itself the investment officer, trustee, owner, regulator and supervisor.
The ISA supported the PC’s earlier research which found internationally government-run super funds invested conservatively as few governments could withstand the political risk of negative returns during market downturns, leading to less money at retirement and more pressure on the Aged Pension.
“And if the government-fund delivered lousy investment returns the taxpayer would be expected to bail it out – which combined with the higher pensions costs is a recipe for higher taxes,” ISA said.
Michael Lovett, who left the investment firm just three months after launching its Vanguard Super offering, has taken up a chief executive role at an Australian asset manager.
The Central Bank of Ireland has granted the approval of Equity Trustees’ exit from its Irish operations, with the transaction expected to be complete on 30 April.
Super returns continued to climb in March, raising hopes of delivering double-digit returns by June depending on the performance of this next quarter.
The dedicated super fund for emergency services and Victorian government employees is under fire for unpaid entitlements to transport employees, which could exceed $40 million.
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