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Critics rouse on Labor over MPs' tax deferral

June 2, 2025

Monday 02 June 2025
Cliona O'Dowd
The Australian


 Labor's admission that politicians including Anthony Albanese will be treated  differently to others paying the proposed new tax on super balances above $3m  has sparked outrage as critics round on the government for not being honest  over the revenue-raising move.
 
 Workplace Relations Minister Amanda Rishworth on Sunday admitted defined  benefit schemes would be "treated differently" to the defined  contribution funds most Australians pay into but failed to clarify exactly  when politicians on defined benefit schemes, such as the Prime Minister ,  would pay the new tax, due to kick in for everyone else next financial year.
 
 It is widely assumed those on legacy defined benefit schemes will not have to  pay the tax until they retire.
 
 Wilson Asset Management founder Geoff Wilson, who has launched a petition  against the proposed tax, said he was appalled by the government's dishonesty  and Australians should expect better from people running the country.  "It's incredibly disappointing that the government hasn't been honest  with the Australian people all the way along. The government has actually  lied about how various politicians will (or won't) be impacted by this  tax," he told The Australian.
 
 "They've got to come clean here. They've tried to make this into a class  war when everyone knows it's a flawed, illogical policy. And now you've got a  situation where the impact of this legislation on the Prime Minister will be  grossly different to the impact on almost every other Australian.
 
 "If he's only impacted by this when he retires, then he gets the benefit  of compounding for all those years he's still working."
 
 Politicians and public servants enrolled in defined benefit schemes before  2005 will likely be able to defer tax payments until retirement, unlike the  vast majority of Australians captured by the new policy, which begins in  fiscal 2026 and will see the tax on earnings over $3m doubled to 30 per cent.
 
 The most controversial elements of the new policy are that it will tax  unrealised gains, or paper profits, and will not be indexed, meaning more  Australians will be caught by the tax in time.
 
 Opposition finance spokesman James Paterson, speaking on Sky after Ms  Rishworth, said the admission the Prime Minister's pension would be treated  differently to others raised a number of questions around how the rules were  written and Mr Albanese's input into the process.
 
 "They're proposing to tax paper profits that may never actually  materialise, but people will nonetheless be assessed on that and have to pay  a tax on that, and they'll have to do it during their working life. So to do  that for some category of superannuation, but not for others, is a really  important and significant thing," he said.
 
 "I think the government has to be open and transparent, much more  transparent than the minister just was and I think the Prime Minister should  stand up today and explain his understanding of this different treatment  between different categories of retirees, and in fact working people, and why  he benefits from it and whether he participated in that decision."
 
 Clime Investment Management founder John Abernethy said the government was  putting the focus and blame on SMSFs when legacy defined benefit schemes were  the real problem.
 
 "If you're going to target large super fund balances then you've also  got to target excessive defined benefits concurrently. And the government  isn't doing that," Mr Abernethy said.
 
 "The government and Treasury are deliberately playing a small picture  here because they don't want to open it up to a bigger debate and a realistic  debate about how to fix Australia's retirement policy for the benefit of  everyone (because) they're holding on to legacy benefits of defined benefit  schemes."
 
 Mr Abernethy said all legacy defined benefit schemes should be paid out, with  a $3m cap, and any working Australians still on these schemes should have  their payout moved to an industry fund.

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