Editor's Choice
ASIC pushes to bolster competitiveness
The regulator has hosted a roundtable with financial services leaders to encourage competitiveness, as it fears Australia is falling behind its global peers.
Euroz Hartleys sells capital markets arm to Canada's BMO
Euroz Hartleys has sold its capital markets business to Canada's BMO Financial Group (BMO) for $145 million in an all-cash deal.
ETF adoption hits 'meaningful threshold' among SWFs
Nearly 40% of sovereign wealth funds have an allocation to ETFs, a new report from Invesco shows, underscoring their expanded roles among institutional investors as their rate of adoption hits a "meaningful threshold".
Super system to hit $12.4tn by 2045
Australia's superannuation system is forecast to triple in size over the next two decades reaching $12.4 trillion by 2045, as sustainable retirement outcomes become the sector's defining challenge.
Products
Featured Profile

Judith Fiander
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
AUSTRALIAN PHILANTHROPIC SERVICES
AUSTRALIAN PHILANTHROPIC SERVICES
When Judith Fiander first walked in the doors of Australian Philanthropic Services her intention was to volunteer for a few months. Fast forward 14 years and she is the chief executive. Eliza Bavin writes.







ADF members considering switching to the new scheme should definitely consider their options carefully.
While this article mentions the contribution rate to the scheme which will be close to that of existing schemes, it doesn't mention that MSBS members who choose to take their employer benefit on retirement as a pension are able to do so on terms that are generous when compared equivalent rates available on the open market (eg, from annuities).
The public sector scheme that offered the same pension conversion factors was closed to new members from 30 June 2005, so to have the opportunity to join this one for an extra 10 years to 30 June 2015 has been quite the opportunity!
Unless you're an ADF member and have reached your Maximum Benefit Limit (and currently receive just 3% Employer Contribution), or have been in the ADF for less than five years, there really is no incentive for the serving member, receiving 23% or 28% Employer Contribution, to make the switch from MSBS to the new super scheme - ADF Super.
The lack of incentives to switch form MSBS to ADF Super is in stark contrast to when MSBS was introduced, in 1991/92, to lure people away from DFRDB and provide improvements for those (most) people who didn't complete 20 years service, and thus qualify for a military pension.
An MBL member who switches over will see their Employer Contribution Rate increase from 3% to 15%. That's a good incentive.
An ADF member with 5 years of service under their belt now, will be receiving 23% Employer Contribution Rate by the time ADF Super kicks off in July 2016. These folks have some some sums to do. "Should I stay with high, uninvested employer contributions or, opt to go with 15.4% of my salary (and superannuable allowances), that are actively invested?"
The introduction of MSBS came with two significant incentives:
1. The MSBS Retention Benefit. (No longer available).
2. 'Generous' transition arrangements. (Your balance in DFRDB was multiplied by a factor and transferred into. The MSBS Fund).
The Government claims that the closure of MSBS will save $126 billion by 2050.
I wonder how much more could be saved if there was some innovation with the new scheme to compel thousands more ADF members to make the switch?
It would seem the Government has missed an opportunity to virtually rid itself of future unfunded liabilities for the MSBS scheme.