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In some of my previous posts I have touted the Australian Superannuation program as a possible solution to America’s retirement funds problem. I admit that this was based on limited knowledge. This is Morningstar’s take on if this is the answer to our problem:
https://www.morningstar.com/retirement/what-us-could-learn-australias-retirement-savings-system?utm_source=eloqua&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=MorningDigest&utm_content=None_73036&utm_id=38090
I would be interested in our Aussie HD readers take on this assessment of their system, and whether they agree with the conclusions about their system.
This was an interesting article, thanks.
From an Australian perspective, a few thoughts:
Not sure the benefit of another government run retirement savings program. We already have one in the US called Social Security. Instead of adding a second how about just fixing the first?
I am not sure if this will practically work in a such a large economy/country like the US that is so divided across several fault lines. To achieve this:
More useful steps could be:
Supposedly the average balance for 65 year old males is $422,000 and individuals select investments. That’s better than 401k balances and savings in general, but it’s not great and still at risk.
Of course, it’s heavily employer funded, but that must come in part from compensation.
I doubt we will ever see it in the USA. I suggest the the employer share of SS taxes be raised to help funding, but I doubt that as well.
I read the article, and have attempted to learn more about Australia’s system. It seems both US and Australia systems tackle savings and the insurance aspects such as survivor and disability situations, albeit differently from each other. I’m not smart enough to determine which system is superior.
If we can’t figure out the tweaks necessary to get SS back on track, how in the world could we start from scratch with a new system. My gut is telling me that we need to fix what we have, and get on with our lives.