Self-funded pension requires you to put aside 20% of your wages if you start doing so when you're 20 years old. Between buying or renting a home, raising children and so on the average wage earner in Australia would struggle to put aside half that amount, and most would not even manage a quarter, if anything at all. Starting with the Keating government employees have been legally required to make those fund contributions on each of their employees' behalf. This was not an extra cost to employers, even though they make out that it were. The superannuation contributions were offset in wages agreements. Currently they are set at 9% of ordinary rates.Strontium Dog wrote: ↑Mon Jun 11, 2018 1:41 amThe great irony is that people can only retire if they have pensions, and people can only have pensions if they invest money in the sort of private enterprises that a pure socialist state would abolish. People worked to death in the USSR, here they retire at 55.pErvinalia wrote: ↑Sun Jun 10, 2018 10:07 amBut we need to work right up until we die. Otherwise, SOCIALISTM!!!1
As for the government retirement pension, nobody is entitled to it before they turn 65, and only those who are born before 01. 06. 1952 qualify then. People born after that date qualify at 65½, unless they are born after January 1954, in which case they qualify when they are 66. Those born after July 1955 qualify at 66½ and those who are born after 1 Jan 1957 at 67.
Must be great retiring in the UK. Or the USA.