- Joined
- Sep 20, 2018
- Posts
- 3,959
- Qantas
- Platinum
These are the sorts of things that we will be doing. I’m always surprised at the naivety of both sides of politics that they seem to assume that people affected by various policies will just bend over and take it without making changes to minimise impact. Compliance on an SMSF has been getting tougher and tougher over the past few years. Our super fund auditors are very hard to deal with, and the thought of tougher compliance and the associated costs makes me run screaming away from keeping an excess super balance, even if the net tax payable is roughly the same for the reasons mentioned up thread.They still are.
I think that when people become or are just a little over the $3m will withdraw (if only to avoid compliance/valuation costs)...buy lifestyle assets, home improvements or home upgrade et c. But don't sell those CBA shares you bought for $25
Super is not an investment, it's a structure. People with larger excess will withdraw and invest through another structure which doesn't tax unrealised gains.
Even I (ordinary person and not an accountant/lawyer) can see benefits of, say, transfering excess into private investment Company structure- no unrealised CGT (but realised cgt is higher), 30% tax on net profit but can pay out franked (!) dividend as desired (unlike trust profits), and bonus avoids the super "inheritance" tax. Message to Gov, people aren't stupid.
Of course no one wants to pay more tax, but I could live with the extra 15% tax proposed. However, I find the taxing of unrealised gains both unfair and scary. And that is what will drive me to alternatives.