Australia’s economy is in good shape
and came through the previous Global Financial Crisis (GFC) relatively
unscathed. A little ‘belt tightening’ here and there and decreased
profitability in investment portfolios – mostly superannuation funds – was the
major impact. Unemployment remained low, in fact many employers had difficulty
in recruiting staff, particularly in service industries and agricultural
industries. So much so that the government changed the rules on ‘working visas’
and allowed many employers to recruit seasonal workers and workers in the
hospitality industry from overseas on special visas for periods of up to six
months. (Many of those workers were recruited by agencies within their own home
countries on wage conditions that were ‘local’ rather than the award conditions
that applied in Australia – cheap labour which really chuffed the union
movement but pleased the employers. Many of those employees have returned for subsequent 6 monthly employment engagements following the compulsory 3 months 'cooling off' period in their home country!)
Australia is a country that has a
compulsory superannuation contributions by employers. Generally, you're entitled to super
guarantee contributions from an employer if you're between 18 and 69 years old
(inclusive) and paid
$450(AUS) or more (before tax) in a month. It doesn't matter whether you're full
time, part time or casual, and it doesn't matter if you're a temporary resident
of Australia.
If you're eligible for super guarantee contributions,
at least every three months your employer must pay into your super account a
minimum of 9% of your ordinary time earnings, up to the 'maximum contribution
base'. These contributions are in addition to your salary or wages. Some employers contribute more than 9% to an employees superannuation as a recruitment incentive.
Superannuation
contributions run into multi-trillions of capital funds. Those funds are
invested in diverse financial portfolios
and the rules for those investments are tightly controlled by the Australian
Taxation Office. In a nutshell, the more profitable an institution that those
funds are invested in the larger the return to the superannuation fund and,
ultimately, the retirement fund for Australian employees.
It was the 'bottom line' earnings that bore the brunt of the last GFC in Australia and some funds even went into 'negative earnings'.
You
cannot take those contributions out of the fund until you reach retirement age.
Presently, you are unable to borrow against those accrued funds, although there
is considerable pressure on the federal government to change this rule.
Advocates for change are arguing for up to 20% of funds over a set balance –
eg, over $250,000(AUS) – should be released to the contributors for use as an interest free home loan deposit and repaid into the
fund as one would repay an ordinary mortgage loan. There is also pressure for working
couples to be able to ‘pool funds’ into a joint superannuation account in an effort to allow low income earners to qualify from such a 'loan' incentive.
Why
is all of this of any importance, you ask? What is its relevance?
Well,
more big employers are poised to shed workers across Australia, adding to the
recent wave of cuts in banking and in the struggling manufacturing and retail
sectors. As the ANZ Bank yesterday flagged plans to slash 1000
positions, it emerged that Qantas was expected to announce job cuts on Thursday
when it issues its half-year earnings.
Australian Bankers Association chief
executive Steve Munchenberg defended interest rate hikes, warning no matter how
angry people became, this was nothing compared to what a credit squeeze could
do to Australia. Many in his industry feared Europe's financial crisis would
get worse before recovering and if international investors saw Australian
banks' profits coming down they would worry, which could trigger a significant
shift in market sentiment. The banks blamed "intense
pressure on margins associated with higher funding costs, lower consumer and
business demand for financial services and increasing global regulation".
Banks have blamed the same factors -
especially economic problems in Europe pushing up their funding costs - for
lifting mortgage rates even though the Reserve Bank left the official cash rate
unchanged last week.
Yesterday
the Commonwealth and National Australia Bank followed ANZ and Westpac in
raising their variable home loan rates. The Commonwealth raised its variable
mortgage rates by 0.1 of a percentage point and NAB's rose by 0.09 of a
percentage point.
Angry Australian home buyers
are breaking with their banks at unprecedented rates. More than 50,000 home
owners refinanced a record $12.6 billion of mortgages in the December quarter,
as they voted with their feet to get a better deal.
Australia is about to be hit
hard by a second global economic crisis and unlike the last time, recovery will
be far from short and sweet, a global finance expert says. Canadian finance and energy analyst
Nicole Foss said a combination of energy shortages, climate change, population
growth, food insecurity and political unrest were brewing a ''perfect storm''
that would ruin society as we know it.
Nicole Foss told farmers in Bungendore that the way
forward when the next
economic crisis hits was to supply
at a local level. Photo: MELISSA ADAMS
Yesterday, she
met a panel of local biofarming representatives to discuss how local communities
could better distribute their resources. She discussed a need for residents to
''decentralise'' by focusing on grassroots initiatives such as community
gardens and local water regeneration.
''All we
need to do is simplify our society from the bottom up,'' she said. ''We need to
get our expectations back in line, reduce our demand and attempt to supply what
we need at a local level.''
NSW State
government Treasurer, Mike Baird warned that
the lesson to draw from the debt crisis plaguing the euro zone was that “… market
forces would punish reckless fiscal management. …”
The
word on the street around our financial districts is – “Get Ready – prepare for
the next onslaught, A second GFC is about to hit the world and it will make the
previous one look like a picnic. It will be worse than the 1930’s depression!”
3 comments:
We're hoping hubby's retirement comes through and we're settled at the retirement property before then.
If not, we'll just take what we can and go anyway.
I just hope it won't be so bad, all the while knowing it probably will be worse.
For someone like myself - on a paltry super pension, no medical or other health benefits, no vehicle registration rebate, no council rates discount and, really, dependent on Rhonda's income it is really frightening. We belong to the group who were two thirds into their working life before the feds introduced compulsory employer financed superannuation. We had no time to accumulate enough funds to cover our retirement (one reason why Rhonda is still working) and we went backwards over the past two financial years on super earnings. We are currently in the process of minimising our debts. We have no loans, we own our home and we try to not use the credit card - and if we do, we pay it back, quickly. We are looking to things like Community shopping co-operatives, community plot gardens, restricting our vehicle mileage to a minimum and that will include coming back to a single car family.
Scary thought, if things got bad where DH wasn't working, we would lose everything, health insurance etc. Our house is not paid off yet, we just bought it 6 1/2 years ago. I can't work. All his pension funds are in the stock market!
Argh!
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