Skip to content
largeleaderboard
  • Asset Owner Directory
  • CIO Sentiment Survey
  • GPTB
  • Investor Profile
  • Events
    • Events calendar
    • Fiduciary Investors Symposium
      • 2026
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Singapore
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Harvard
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Stanford
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Oxford
      • 2027
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Singapore
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Harvard
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Stanford
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Oxford
      • Previous years
    • Sustainability in Practice
  • Podcasts
  • Research Hub
  • Risk
  • Sustainability
  • Memberships
  • Partnered Content
    • Content Hubs
      • CFA Institute
      • Goldman Sachs Asset Management
    • InFocus
    • Podcasts
    • Webinars
Subscribe Login
Become a member and subscribe Login
  • Asset Owner Directory
  • CIO Sentiment Survey
  • GPTB
  • Investor Profile
  • Events
    • Events calendar
    • Fiduciary Investors Symposium
      • 2026
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Singapore
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Harvard
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Stanford
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Oxford
      • 2027
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Singapore
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Harvard
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Stanford
        • Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Oxford
      • Previous years
    • Sustainability in Practice
  • Podcasts
  • Research Hub
  • Risk
  • Sustainability
  • Memberships
  • Partnered Content
    • Content Hubs
      • CFA Institute
      • Goldman Sachs Asset Management
    • InFocus
    • Podcasts
    • Webinars

Login with account details

Or

Send me a login link

Forgot password?Click here

No membership?Register here

onebyone
skin-left
skin-right
billboard

Home > Editorial

Editorial

Australian super: from wealth creation to provision

Amanda White

January 16, 2013

Save Article

I recently hosted a roundtable discussion about post-retirement solutions in the Australian superannuation market. Australia’s system is revered in many ways, but it’s curious to me that it can be a world-class system and yet have no real mechanism for providing retirement income.

The $1.4 trillion Australian system is unique in many ways. Mostly that uniqueness is a good thing. It’s mandated and compulsory for every working Australian, and last year the government committed to increasing the compulsory amount of contributions to 12 per cent. It consistently ranks highly in the Mercer Pension Index and it’s sustainable.

But the system is unique even in its language. Superannuation? Post-retirement? One academic put it succinctly when he said if you’re planning for post-retirement then you’re planning for death.

The language reflects the problem the roundtable participants sought to solve: there is no mention in the Australian vernacular about pension or income stream or annuity or quality of life in retirement.

mrec4

Australia’s system benefits and suffers from being defined contribution. And it is this structure that is at the core of the current second phase of the system.

Former prime minister, Paul Keating, who along with others is famed with creating the system, recently made some comments about it including the description that “superannuation emerged from the cooperative model, like perspiration emerges from the pores of skin…” But more seriously he says that the original model of superannuation is under considerable pressure and in his view “the promise we make to the member has to change”.

inarticleinline
Sponsored Content
scnative1
scnative2
scnative3

 

From wealth creation to provision

The system needs to be redesigned to account for longevity and sequencing risks, but also to shift the mindset, and solutions, of superannuation funds from wealth creation to income provision.

The roundtable discussion was led by Jeremy Cooper and attended by a who’s who of the Australian retirement industry including leading academics and actuaries, the heads of Towers Watson and Mercer, and the representatives from many of the country’s largest funds.

The overwhelming outcome of the roundtable was a collective will to change the conversation topic to provision of retirement income. No longer, it seems, will the Australian system be a giant bank account. Income will become the aim of the game.

But an indication of just how far the funds will have to move to achieve that is that AustralianSuper, the largest of the Australian funds with two million members and $46 billion, has no real provision for individual retirement solutions.

Similarly, a comment by a Cbus executive was that the “sector is on the nose”.

What is required in Australia is what Russell’s Don Ezra calls “DB-isation of DC” in his book, The Retirement Plan Solution: The Reinvention of Defined Contribution, co-authored with Bob Collie and Matthew Smith.

Leading pension academic and consultant, Keith Ambachtsheer, explains it well in his August 2012 Ambachtsheer Letter. He said the traditional defined contribution model simply accumulates financial capital with no particular goal in mind. The popular target-date fund innovation does not change the fundamental reality as it simply introduces an age-based equity-exposure rule into the mix.

The game changer, Ambachtsheer says, is the shift to a target pension by a target date.

Ezra wrote an article in the Rotman International Journal of Pension Management, which Ambachtsheer edits, in which he outlines the need to understand members’ post-work wants and needs. He says funds should help members convert post-work needs and aspirations into consistent financial implications, help members understand that longevity risk increases with age, and separate the investment and longevity risk-mitigation decisions.

“The major point is that 21st century DC-driven plans don’t just have intelligent asset accumulation designs. Their asset decumulation designs must receive an equal share of innovative thinking,” Ambachtsheer says.

The good news from observing the roundtable participants is that a light has been switched on in the Australian superannuation industry and funds have finally made the realisation their purpose is to provide retirement income for members, not just hand over a chunk of money. The super fund executives are taking seriously their role of improving the quality of life of Australians in retirement.

In the next few years the design and provision of retirement income will be the focus of all funds in the Australian industry as they work out how to consider longevity risk, sequencing risk, inflation risk and volatility risk for every individual member.

The roundtable group wants the government to be involved in that discussion and has outlined the goal of the role of deferred annuities to be considered in the May budget.

It’s an exciting and innovative time in the Australian industry.

asset decumulation designs must receive an equal share of innovative thinking, August 2012 Ambachtsheer Letter, Australian retirement industry, DC-driven plans don’t just have intelligent asset accumulation designs, Former prime minister, Income will become the aim of the game, Jeremy Cooper, Keith Ambachtsheer, Mercer Pension Index, Paul Keating, provision of retirement income, Russell’s Don Ezra, separate the investment and longevity risk-mitigation decisions, super fund executives are taking seriously their role of improving the quality of life of Australians in retirement, The Retirement Plan Solution: The Reinvention of Defined Contribution, the Rotman International Journal of Pension Management

Asset Owner:AustralianSuper

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Login
More from this fund
Analysis

AustralianSuper built scale – now its new CIO needs to make it work

Darcy Song

June 01, 2026

FIS Stanford 2025

Public-private partnerships key to fixing US infrastructure

Darcy Song

September 29, 2025

FIS Singapore 2025

Asset owners prepare portfolios for a brave new world

Lachlan Maddock

March 31, 2025

Featured Story

APAC’s mega trends: The investors positioning for the future

Sarah Rundell

December 06, 2024

Editorial

What I took away from the world’s ‘festival of private capital’
Editorial

What I took away from the world’s ‘festival of private capital’

The on- and off-stage antics at the extravagant Milken Global Conference in Los Angeles tell us a lot about where institutional capital is right on the money – and where it is putting its head in the sand.

Colin Tate

May 07, 2026

Editorial

Strong governance and new ideas central to Kevin Warsh ideology

Amanda White

February 01, 2026

Editorial

Best of 2025

Amanda White

December 22, 2025

Editorial

Vale Greg Bright, father of Australia’s financial trade press

STAFF WRITER

August 26, 2024

Editorial

Letter to the editor

Amanda White

May 18, 2021

Sort content by

Editorial

Remembering David Villa

David Villa, executive director and chief investment officer of the State of Wisconsin Investment Board, passed away on the weekend. Amanda White reflects on his legacy.

Amanda White

February 16, 2021

Editorial

The best of 2020

In 2020, as the world and global economies changed so dramatically, we were on our toes to innovate our media and event offerings in a bid to give you what you needed to navigate a changing world. We pivoted to a digital event offering, introduced podcast series and created a COVID-19 research hub

Amanda White

December 22, 2020

Editorial

Campaigns guide industry best practice

In 2021 Top1000funds.com will be actively campaigning to ensure the industry is allocating capital for the best possible outcomes for individuals and for the world. Here we launch our campaigns, and encourage you to be a part of them.

Amanda White

December 15, 2020

Editorial

“Black Swan” an excuse for inaction

Black Swan has become a cliché for any bad thing that surprises us. But the onset of COVID-19 was not a Black Swan according to the academic who invented the term and laments its misuse. So why does the finance industry continue to be ignorant or unable to look beyond traditional finance models in assessing global risks?

Amanda White

December 08, 2020

Editorial

Most popular stories of 2018

We are also pleased to say that you, our readers, are spending more time on our site, as evidenced by our 10 most read stories, which averaged 4.2 minutes per article. Thank you to all our interview subjects, readers and supporters over the last year. Below is a look at the 10 most popular stories of 2018.

Amanda White

December 20, 2018

Organisational Design

Inquiry hits Australian superannuation

Everything from charging dead people fees to trustees nixing mergers out of self-interest has emerged, as royal commission hearings have exposed big flaws in the world's fourth-largest pension system.

Amanda White

August 17, 2018

1 2 3 4
Next
Load more
Asset Owner Directory

Canada Pension Plan Investments (CPPIB)

AUM ($B): $572
Country: Canada
View Articles

Norges Bank Investment Management

AUM ($B): $2,218
Country: Norway
View Articles

AustralianSuper

AUM ($B): $251
Country: Australia
View Articles
See more
scnative1
scnative2
scnative3
mrec1
mrec2
mrec3
mrec4
halfpage

Fiduciary Investors Podcast Series

Listen to Podcast

Subscribe now to

Become a member and subscribe

Join Now
Our partners

Top1000funds.com is the market leading news and analysis site for the world’s largest institutional investors. It focuses on leading the global investment industry to continuous improvement through case studies of best practice in governance and decision making, portfolio construction and efficient portfolio management, fees and costs, and sustainable investing.

The publication pushes the industry to question whether status quo processes and behaviours to tackle risks and opportunities will be sufficient in the future, and actively campaigns for diversity, sustainability, transparency, innovation and better alignment of fees in the investment industry.

Top1000funds.com is read by investment professionals in more than 40 countries.

  • Asset Allocation
  • Asset Classes
  • CIO Sentiment Survey
  • Organisational Design
  • Strategy
  • Sustainability
  • Investor Profile
  • About
  • AI Editorial Policy
  • Events
  • Our Authors
  • Advertise With Us
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Cookie Policy | AI Editorial Policy

Login with account details

Or

Send me a login link

Forgot password?Click here

No membership?Register here