The Joint Associations Working Group (JAWG) is calling for crucial amendments to the Treasury Laws Amendment (Better Targeted Superannuation Concessions and Other Measures) Bill 2023, to avoid significant unintended consequences and unfair outcomes for consumers, small businesses, advisers and the government.
Together, Schedules 1 to 3 to the Bill and the Imposition Bill are designed to reduce the tax concessions available to individuals with a total superannuation balance exceeding $3 million.
JAWG members have identified four key issues which need to be addressed before the Bill is legislated:
- Taxing unrealised capital gains – an outworking of the calculations in the Schedules will see tax levied on the increase in the capital value of an asset, as well as actual taxable earnings. Capital Gains Tax will also be levied when the assets are sold;
- The absence of indexation – the $3 million threshold, left unindexed, will lead to generational inequity and unnecessary uncertainty for the superannuation system;
- Clarity on the proposed treatment of members in defined benefit funds, especially those already in receipt of pensions; and
- The impact of material increases to liquidity requirements for funds holding large and unlisted assets such as family farms and business real property.
Applying different tax rates on capital gains, both notional and realised, is unnecessarily confusing and complicated.
The JAWG has broad industry concerns about the consequences of this approach, including both the impact on small business and primary producers who hold their small business premise and primary production land in an SMSF, and the constraints of applying these provisions in large funds.
The JAWG notes there are other ways of reducing the tax concessions available to individuals with large superannuation balances that do not involve taxing unrealised capital gains.
We recommend the removal of Schedules 1 to 3 from the Bill to enable more holistic consultation on measures which achieve the Government’s objective of achieving greater equity, and which are consistent with existing taxation principles.
Background
According to ATO statistics, over $90 billion of commercial property (mainly small business premises and primary production land) is held by SMSFs. Industry research estimates around one in four SMSF members, impacted by this tax (13,500 SMSF members) hold real property in their fund.
Including unrealised capital gains in the calculation of earnings is likely to cause liquidity stress for many individuals and business entities impacted by this tax. The University of Adelaide estimates that had this tax been introduced in the 2021 and 2022 financial years, over 13 per cent of impacted members would have experienced liquidity stress in meeting the new tax obligations[1].
Some small business owners will be forced to sell their business premises to save their business. Selling such assets is typically associated with substantial transaction costs and market timing considerations that are likely to further exacerbate potential losses and introduce other investment risks.
The treatment of unrealised capital gains and carried forward losses in the Schedules presents substantial challenges given the nature of capital markets. It is not uncommon to see several bull market years followed by a sharp market decline. This means many members will effectively be cumulatively taxed on investments that make an overall loss when eventually sold without any real recourse to recover the tax already paid.
Including unrealised capital gains in the calculation of earnings means an individual’s year-on-year tax liability will be directly related to the performance of investment markets, adding to the unpredictability and making liquidity management extremely difficult.
The JAWG notes the root cause of these issues is the departure of the use of actual taxable earnings as the basis for calculating “earnings”. Including unearned income in the calculation immediately gives rise to unintended consequences and inequitable outcomes.
The JAWG acknowledges the constraints and limitations faced by some funds in tracking actual taxable earnings allocated to a member. However, one alternative could be the use of an earnings rate that is a close proxy for actual taxable earnings. The 90-day bank bill rate is used in other areas of the superannuation legislation to approximate earnings.
We also call for the indexation of the $3 million threshold by average wage increases to ensure it retains its relative value, promoting stability and equity in the superannuation system. Leaving the cap unindexed would mean over 500,000 current taxpayers would be adversely affected by the time they retire, or over six times current Government’s estimate. Further, a 30-year-old today will have a real cap of around $1 million in today’s dollars.[2]
About the Joint Associations Working Group
The Joint Associations Working Group is a coalition of 11 industry and professional bodies representing financial advisers, stockbrokers, accountants, superannuation trustees and investors with the goal of making advice more affordable and accessible for consumers.
Members include:
Boutique Financial Planning Principals Association Inc. (BFP)
Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand (CA ANZ)
CPA Australia
Financial Advice Association of Australia (FAAA)
Financial Services Council (FSC)
Financial Services Institute of Australasia (FINSIA)
Stockbrokers and Investment Advisers Association (SIAA)
Institute of Public Accountants (IPA)
Licensee Leadership Forum (LLF)
Self Managed Super Fund Association (SMSFA)
The Advisers Association Ltd (TAA)
[1] University of Adelaide, Evaluation of the proposed changes to superannuation tax concessions, October 2023.
[2] FSC distributional analysis using ATO data