Superannuation benefits
Contributed by Paul Bingham and Graham Young and current to 1 September 2005
Trust deeds provide for benefits to be paid to members and their dependants in different circumstances. These include resignation, retirement, total and permanent disability and death benefits.
Trustees normally have no discretion in relation to the payment of resignation or retirement benefits. Disputes concerning these benefits are rare, and usually concern calculation of the amount of the benefit.
PRESERVATION
The bulk of superannuation benefits are “preserved” and cannot normally be paid to a person until they retire after a certain age (see below), reach age 65, become permanently incapacitated, permanently depart from Australia, suffer severe financial hardship, or suffer temporary incapacity, or on compassionate grounds.
Benefits contributed before 1986/1990 (depending on the fund involved) are, generally, not preserved. Undeducted contributions (that is, those on which a tax deduction was not claimed) were generally not preserved until 1 July 1999. Since that date, all contributions are preserved (or, more accurately, restricted).
ACCESS TO BENEFITS
Thus, there may be some unpreserved benefits that can be accessed before retirement, or some preserved benefits can be accessed in an emergency.
The relevant age for the retirement of a person born before 1 July 1960 is 55 years. This increases to 60 for those born after 30 June 1964, with transitional ages for those born between those dates.
However, if a person has been in receipt of a pension, income-support supplement or benefit (as defined in section 23 of the
Social Security Act 1991) – a list can be obtained by telephoning Centrelink on 13 1021 – for a continuous period of 26 weeks, and if the Fund’s trust deed allows early release, the funds can be released early. A letter confirming the period and nature of the payment (obtainable by telephoning 132 300 or 132 850) must be attached to an application form (obtainable from the trustee of the Fund) and forwarded to the trustee of the Fund.
Funds can also be released early for medical treatment, medical transport, modification of a house or car for a disabled person, death, funeral, burial or palliative care expenses, or for mortgage payments to stop a mortgagee from selling the person’s home. The application is made to the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority. To make a claim, telephone the Authority on 131 060 and ask for a “specified grounds” application form.
AGE AND SUPERANNUATION
There is a pension bonus scheme available to a person who defers claiming age pension. The maximum bonus available for a single male deferring the pension to age 70 is $26,900.
INFORMATION FROM FUNDS
A member of a regulated fund is entitled to certain information to be provided automatically by the fund. This includes:
• an annual member statement showing the amount of the benefit at the start and end of the year (generally 1 July to the next 30 June), the preserved amount and fund contact details, and the value of the benefit on resignation or retirement, including death and disability benefits;
• an annual fund report showing the fund’s financial position and performance; and
• notice of any changes that affect the member, such as any change to the fund rules.
A member is also entitled to other information on request.
SUPERANNUATION AND BANKRUPTCY
Some superannuation entitlements are protected if a person goes bankrupt, meaning that the creditors cannot take the superannuation savings. The bankrupt retains the benefit of monies in a regulated (and certain other types of) superannuation fund up to the pension reasonable benefit limit. However, a payment to a superannuation fund will be caught by the relation back or avoidance provisions of the
Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth), even though that payment gives rise to the interest in the fund, which is protected:
Official Trustee in Bankruptcy v Trevor Newton Small Superannuation Fund Pty Ltd [2001] FCA 1267.