Media Release

Keeping to the facts in the super tax debate

ASFA Statement: 17 April 2015

Keeping to the facts in the super tax debate

John Roskam’s opinion piece, ‘Keeping to the law is fair in tax’, which featured in the Australian Financial Review on 17 April 2015, included a number of inaccuracies.

Mr Roskam stated that the Association of Superannuation Funds Australia (ASFA) paper on very high superannuation account balances was “targeting superannuation accounts with over $1 million”. This is not correct. ASFA’s research, released earlier this month, which is based on Australian Bureau of Statistics data, shows that there are 70,000 people with very high balances – this is above $2.5 million.

ASFA has advocated since its 2013/14 pre-Budget submission that changes to superannuation, particularly in post-retirement, should begin with balances above $2.5 million. At no time has ASFA advocated for changes to superannuation for accounts below $2.5 million.

In developing the basis for this number, ASFA considered the following: a replacement rate in retirement that is often used is 60 per cent of gross pre-retirement incomes and, for a person on $200,000 a year, a reasonable upper limit for the provision of taxation concessions or other assistance, a drawdown of $120,000 is required in retirement. This is close to twice the ASFA Retirement Standard estimate for the income required for a ‘comfortable’ retirement. Using the minimum drawdown factor for a person aged 65 to 74, this would require a superannuation balance of $2.4 million. Accordingly, ASFA’s view is that account balances in excess of $2.5 million are where a line should be drawn.

ASFA also thinks very high superannuation balances should not be targeted exclusively in the absence of a broader consideration of the superannuation and taxation system. The tax issues paper is the correct place for this to be considered as part of a holistic review of the tax system and ASFA will be advocating for its position in its submission.

ASFA’s members include all superannuation providers from all sectors. It advocates for public policy that puts fund members and the sustainability of the retirement incomes system at its centre. It has robust policy development processes at an operational and governance level that insure all sectors’ views are heard but ultimately good public policy is policy that is bi-partisan, longer term and insures sustainability, equity and effectiveness.

Amy C. Edmondson

Novartis Professor of Leadership and Management, Harvard Business School

Sessions

Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Amy C. Edmondson is the Novartis Professor of Leadership and Management at the Harvard Business School, a chair established to support the study of human interactions that lead to the creation of successful enterprises that contribute to the betterment of society.

Edmondson has been recognized by the biannual Thinkers50 global ranking of management thinkers since 2011, and most recently was ranked #1 in 2021 and 2023; she also received that organization’s Breakthrough Idea Award in 2019, and Talent Award in 2017.  She studies teaming, psychological safety, and organisational learning, and her articles have been published in numerous academic and management outlets, including Administrative Science Quarterly, Academy of Management Journal, Harvard Business Review and California Management Review. Her 2019 book, The Fearless Organization: Creating Psychological Safety in the Workplace for Learning, Innovation and Growth (Wiley), has been translated into 15 languages. Her prior books – Teaming: How organizations learn, innovate and compete in the knowledge economy (Jossey-Bass, 2012), Teaming to Innovate (Jossey-Bass, 2013) and Extreme Teaming (Emerald, 2017) – explore teamwork in dynamic organisational environments. In Building the future: Big teaming for audacious innovation (Berrett-Koehler, 2016), she examines the challenges and opportunities of teaming across industries to build smart cities. 

Edmondson’s latest book, Right Kind of Wrong (Atria), builds on her prior work on psychological safety and teaming to provide a framework for thinking about, discussing, and practicing the science of failing well. First published in the US and the UK in September, 2023, the book is due to be translated into 24 additional languages, and was selected for the Financial Times and Schroders Best Business Book of the Year award.

Before her academic career, she was Director of Research at Pecos River Learning Centers, where she worked on transformational change in large companies. In the early 1980s, she worked as Chief Engineer for architect/inventor Buckminster Fuller, and her book A Fuller Explanation: The Synergetic Geometry of R. Buckminster Fuller (Birkauser Boston, 1987) clarifies Fuller’s mathematical contributions for a non-technical audience. Edmondson received her PhD in organisational behavior, AM in psychology, and AB in engineering and design from Harvard University.

 

Daniel Mulino MP

Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Financial Services

Sessions

Keynote 8 – Navigating the energy transition: opportunities, investor strategies and policy needs

Born in Brindisi, Italy, Daniel was a young child when he moved with his family to Australia. He grew up in Canberra and completed his first degrees – arts and law – at the ANU. He then completed a Master of Economics (University of Sydney) and a PhD in economics from Yale.

He lectured at Monash University, was an economic adviser in the Gillard government and was a Victorian MP from 2014 to 2018. As Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer of Victoria, Daniel helped deliver major infrastructure projects and developed innovative financing structures for community projects.

In 2018 he was preselected for the new federal seat of Fraser and became its first MP at the 2019 election, re-elected in 2022 and 2025. From 2022 to 2025, Daniel was chair of the House of Representatives’ Standing Economics Committee in which he chaired inquiries; economic dynamism, competition and business formation and insurers’ responses to 2022 major floods claims.

In 2025, he became the Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Financial Services.

In August 2022, Daniel published ‘Safety Net: The Future of Welfare in Australia’, which aims to explore the ways in which an insurance approach can improve the effectiveness of government service delivery.