This is an edited transcript of Jeremy Cooper's radio interview with Geraldine Doogue on ABC's RN Saturday Extra Program recorded on 19 November 2022.
Jeremy Cooper is a former ASIC deputy chair, former chairman of retirement income at Challenger and chaired the 2010 federal government review into super.
Geraldine Doogue: Since compulsory super was introduced by the Hawke-Keating duo back in 1992, there have been several significant changes. Now there's increasing talk of more to come, though quite when and what isn't completely clear. Maybe a genuine effort to precisely define what this whole system is for. It's become phenomenally successful. But what exactly is its purpose? The answer is not entirely clear, and there's many trillions resting on that answer. I'll check with Jeremy Cooper, who's never far from these dilemmas.
What are the tom-toms saying about possible changes to our super system?
Cooper: Well, the drums seem to be constantly beating with super. There are just so many ideas about change, and that's part of the problem. So, really, getting back to basics is what this idea of having a purpose of super is about, to dampen down the noise and really focus on, I guess, simplifying it down to a fairly sort of sparse economic concept that super is really a consumption smoothing mechanism...
... basically, you are spending a little bit less during your working years by money being taken out of your wages and put into this thing called superannuation with the idea of then being able to spend – now, that spend word is somewhat lost in all the noise – spend some of that money that you've put away, which is compounded by interest and investment returns over the period, and then that makes your lifestyle in retirement better than it would have been if that mechanism hadn't been there. That's the basic idea.
The problem is, it's become too politically contested, because there's about $3.5 trillion sitting in our system, which is probably the most successful retirement income system in the world. It's not perfect, but it's become very politically contested, and it has, what I call, barnacles all over it. In other words, there's franking credits; there are downsides or concessions; there are small business concessions and on it goes.
And most of it's about tax. It's not about retirement savings. It's basically about what can I get out of this system. It's a little bit like housing. It's all about negative gearing and capital gains tax exemptions and exemptions from the age pension. So, housing becomes financialized. It's a bit of a funny word, but I think that's happened to superannuation. We've basically forgotten this basic, simple, consumption smoothing that it's not about building wealth and passing it on to the next generation. It's actually about having a better retirement than just the age pension could give you.
Doogue: Well, I mean, David Murray, who did another review, said that taxpayer supportive super should help "provide income in retirement to substitute or supplement the age pension." That was his sort of clarifying definition.
Cooper: No, you can't disagree with that, but it's too anodyne. In other words, you might go well, of course it is. Of course it's about that. The trouble is, if you only had a purpose that consisted of that, what you're not doing is you're not ruling out – and I'm getting too many negatives here – but you're not ruling out what it's not for – that it's not for early access for housing. It's not for passing on to the next generation. So, you need to go further than just this very simple statement, which is basically just plainly obvious. Of course, that's what it's about and what it's for. But then, there are all these other subsidiary things that tend to be the tail wagging the dog.
Doogue: I suppose what I'm getting at is, if it's correct that – well, the implication was you take the load off the age pension provision so that then there's something in it for all taxpayers, because the consolidated revenue isn't bearing that load. Is it doing that?
Cooper: Well, you see, it depends on where you set the level of the age pension. Now, various governments have decided to be more generous with the age pension than they would otherwise be. So, the age pension is not some sort of static thing. As living standards improve and as we all get better off, which we are phenomenally well off in this country, it seems appropriate to keep being aspirational about the age pension. Otherwise, you'd leave those not working and reliant on the age pension, you leave them behind the rest of the community. And I don't think there are too many people who want that.
So, the age pension is not some sort of static target. In fact, if you look at the way the age pension has grown, it's quite dramatic, which I think is appropriate in a wealthy country. So, it's got to be about more than that. And I think we need to include things like the benefits of having a pool of national savings that is not owned by the government. It's basically owned by us, the people of Australia, and administered by a system that's doing that on our behalf. That's actually an important purpose.
And the reason I say that is that we're now in a position not unlike Switzerland, where we own more shares in the rest of the world than they own in us. And what that means is that we now have something that because of super, basically all the investing that super does around the rest of the world, has built up a pile of money that's really quite significant in terms of our GDP.
Doogue: Well, it makes you much less brittle as a nation. Is that the idea?
Cooper: It does. Exactly. Yes. It's like a – think of super as a sovereign wealth fund, a very large one, that isn't owned or controlled by the government, but by the citizens.
Doogue: Now, I mean, I was going to ask this later, but I'll ask it now. Therefore, this talk as well in this great debate that is on quietly at the moment, about super possibly being put into things of national development like infrastructure or like, say, the provision of housing. How do you react to that?
Cooper: Cautiously. I'm open minded, I'd like to hear more about exactly what we mean by that. There are some fairly unhappy examples in other countries where well-meaning politicians have sought to get their hands on the large slabs of – that's happening in the U.K. at the moment. The politicians there are talking madly about the pension system, investing in infrastructure and so on. Chris Bowen said that there are very few policy problems for which the superannuation industry hasn't been put forward as the solution. So, you've got to be cautious. But I'm interested in hearing there can be win wins with these sorts of things that we could do something that was beneficial to the super system and also to the nation.
Doogue: Okay. Go back then to what might come because I noticed, for instance, John Kehoe writing in the Financial Review the other day. These are the sort of headlines that are around that why super tax breaks for retirees can't go on like this. Or there was another – with tax concessions totalling more than $40 billion last year, which areas are likely to be targeted? So, there is a growing view from what I've read, even within the industry that these generous concessions cannot last. Do you agree with that?
Cooper: Broadly, yes. I think that's right. And it's not about the budget for me. It's about basically equity and fairness. So, just consider somebody – let's just assume that I'm nearing retirement. I could go into retirement soon, and I could be earning, let's just say, several hundred thousand dollars a year upon which I would pay absolutely no tax and even better than that for me personally, but not so much for society, I would actually probably receive franking credit rebates as well, possibly in the tens of thousands of dollars. Let's just think I've got two kids who are 30 somethings. They're carrying HECS debts. They're trying to buy a house in Sydney at the moment. They're on relatively modest incomes upon which they're paying more tax than I would be.
Doogue: Yeah.
Cooper: I'd be interested in who could explain to me why that's an equitable setting. It's embarrassing. I sort of choke having just said that. It's just unequal and illogical and frankly, dangerous. I mean, when you set up parts of a society in different age groups and on different income bands, that's just so unequal, it's just not good policy. Now, of course, that's easy for me to say. I'm not a politician going out there and actually rendering that change. I mean, once you've given – particularly retirees, once you've given somebody a state of affairs, winding it back, it's very difficult. But that's not to say that we shouldn't be having the conversations. People have picked a figure of $5 million. If you've got $5 million in super, the excess above that should be treated as effectively being in the ordinary economy, not being in super, and should be taxed appropriately.
Doogue: What are the various options as you see then? What would you choose?
Cooper: Well, one of – some time ago, when I was thinking about – I did another smaller job for the Labor government in 2013 on topics related to the purpose of super, and I came up with the – it's a bit of a slogan really – that no change to superannuation should be urgent. In other words, there should really never be a budget night surprise change to what's effectively in some cases a 70-year saving and spending system, which is what superannuation is. You might spend 40 years in work and then 30-odd years in retirement, spending that money down. That is a very, very long-term bargain that you're making with the government effectively. And so, if you were to change the settings for retirement, there would need to be a long conversation about it, and lots of warning for people as to what to expect if they were nearing retirement, time to rearrange their affairs, possibly while they're in retirement. So, I'm totally sympathetic to that.
This is an edited transcript of Jeremy Cooper's radio interview with Geraldine Doogue on ABC's RN Saturday Extra Program recorded on 19 November 2022.