retirement – Michmutters
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Australia

The rising cost of living and global economic uncertainty mean older Australians such as Brett are delaying retirement

When Brett Clements got his first job at 15, he dreamed that, if he worked hard, he would be able to enjoy the fruits of his labor and retire at 40, but it wasn’t to be.

A modest superannuation balance and the rising cost of living mean the 60-year-old Perth-based cleaner expects to be working for at least another 10 years.

“I have about $150,000 in superannuation, and I’ll end up with $10,000 left out of my superannuation after the house is paid for, which isn’t a lot to live on after 45 years of working,” he told ABC’s 7.30.

“[I’m] definitely behind the eight ball … because the wages aren’t good. So, therefore, your [amount] is not that great going into super.”

Another decade of labor will be painfully hard for Mr Clements, who still suffers physically and financially from breaking his back when he owned his own cleaning business 20 years ago.

“We tried to keep that business going. In the end, we just had to fold it,” he said.

“I’ve suffered with this ever since.”

Mr Clements’ 75-year-old wife works alongside him as a cleaner and can’t afford to retire either.

Man holding a trolley full of cleaning equipment.
Brett Clements expects he will be working for at least another 10 years.(ABC News: Phil Hemingway)

“She’ll tell you that I’ve become more and more depressed,” he said.

“We buy mainly home-branded stuff but … an $80 shop is now $130.”

What’s making Mr Clements even more uneasy is that his superannuation balance is fluctuating daily because of the global economic uncertainty.

“I have a balanced superannuation, so I’m not a big risk-taker,” Mr Clements said.

“COVID hit, the war in Ukraine has hit. Now, suddenly, everything’s volatile.”

According to consultancy firm SuperRatings, only three superannuation funds have reported that they made money for their members with balanced investments during the past financial year.

SuperRatings’ top 10 balanced super options over 12 months:

Rank

Option name

1-year returns (%)

1

Hostplus – Balanced

1.6

two

Qantas Super Gateway—Growth

0.6

3

Christian Super — MyEthicalSuper

0.5

4

Legalsuper — MySuper Balanced

-1.0

5

Australian Retirement Trust — Super Savings – Balanced

-1.0

6

Energy Super—Balanced

-1.2

7

Aust Catholic Super and Ret—Balanced

-1.2

8

CareSuper—Balanced

-1.7

9

HESTA—Balanced Growth

-1.8

10

Telstra Super Corp Plus — Balanced

-1.9

Man with brown hair wearing a black suit with a white shirt and blue tie.
Glenn McCrea says Australians shouldn’t be focused on short-term share market volatility when it comes to their super.(Supplied)

However, the Association of Superannuation Funds Australia’s deputy chief executive, Glenn McCrea, is urging older Australians not to panic about share market volatility.

“The reality is [the previous] financial year, we saw returns of 20 per cent. Este [past] year, it has fallen slightly, on average about 3 per cent,” he said.

“Call your fund. Understand where your fund invests. Understand your balance and how your balance has changed over time.

“I do encourage people to look at returns over 10 years, rather than follow what happens day to day.”

The downturn in superannuation amounts comes as the government and opposition clash over the level of detail that superannuation funds provide to their members about political donations, marketing and sponsorship expenses.

super balances at retirement

Estimates vary on how many Australians need to retire.

Mr McCrea said that, on the association’s calculations, a single person would need $545,000 and a couple $640,000 in retirement to live comfortably.

“[It] basically means you can afford to go to a dentist, you can catch up with friends and have that cup of coffee, you can fix the washing machine or car,” he said.

“We estimate that, by 2050, 50 per cent of Australians will get to that dignity in retirement.”

Despite wanting to be self-sufficient, Mr Clements knows his superannuation won’t be enough to sustain his retirement.

“I’ll have to go, cap in hand, to the government and try [to] draw on a pension,” he said.

“Pride gets in the way sometimes.”

Young Australians also worried

It’s not just those hoping to retire soon who are feeling nervous about their superannuation and their future.

Hairdresser Michaela Marshall-Lawrence, 27, was forced to withdraw $5,000 from her superannuation at the start of the pandemic to keep her salon afloat.

She’d just opened the business, and faced the brunt of lockdowns amid a drop in bookings.

Woman with pink hair holding a hairdryer.
Michaela Marshall-Lawrence had only just opened her business when COVID-19 hit.(ABC News: Edward Gill)

“I wasn’t eligible for any government support, in any way, shape or form,” she said.

“I had already exhausted 95 per cent of my savings on purchasing the salon.

“[The $5,000 super withdrawal] it was enough that it paid for another month’s worth of rent, and I could pay my staff and I could afford to live.”

Under the former Coalition government’s scheme, up to $20,000 could be withdrawn from a person’s super during the pandemic if they were experiencing hardship.

However, withdrawing the money early meant missing out on potentially tens of thousands of dollars of compound earnings across future years, something that concerns Ms Marshall-Lawrence.

Woman sitting in a salon.  She has long, fair, hair that has been dyed pink.
Michaela Marshall-Lawrence is making extra super contributions to try to grow her balance faster.(ABC News: Edward Gill)

“I’m now paying myself 22 per cent super,” she said.

“I know so many people, they’re like, ‘Oh, it’s just super. I can’t access it for another 50-60 years anyway, so what’s the point?’

“And it’s like, ‘Well, there is a big point, you know’.”

Data exclusively provided to ABC’s 7.30 by the Association of Superannuation Funds Australia shows that, out of the 3 million people who accessed their super early, 1 million were left with less than $1,000 in their super account, while 163,000 people were left with no super at there.

Mr McCrea said those who took out money early were mostly single parents, women and those on low incomes, and 44 per cent of applicants were aged under 35.

“There’s no doubt younger people were the main people to take money out through early release,” he said.

“What we do know is a younger person who took the full $20,000 out, will be $43,000 worse off in retirement, so that’s for a 30-year-old,” he said.

Council on the Aging chief executive Ian Yates said those who had withdrawn early would find it tougher to fund their own retirement.

Ian Yates, CEO of Council on Aging Australia
Council on the Aging Australia’s Ian Yates predicts early withdrawals may see higher pension costs in future.(ABC News: Marco Catalano)

“The impact of that withdrawal is that there’ll be higher pension costs into future years,” he said.

Shadow Minister for Financial Services Stuart Robert maintains the former Coalition government policy was a necessary one at a time of crisis.

“This was a one-in-100-year pandemic. This is a not normal state of affairs,” he said.

“Australians are pretty canny and Australians are able to make decisions themselves.

“The requirement, and the responsibility, was with individual Australians because, remember, it’s their money.”

Fund spending in the spotlight

How superannuation funds spend their members’ money is currently under scrutiny before Federal Parliament.

Mr Robert said the Labor Government was trying to wind back the Coalition’s policy to force funds to itemise disclosure of political donations, marketing, and sponsorship expenses.

A man in a suit and tie.
Shadow Minister for Financial Services Stuart Robert says members should be able to see how super funds are spending their money.(ABC News: Matt Roberts)

“We believe them [super funds] should be transparent. All members should be able to see how every dollar of their money has been spent,” he said.

“The transparency and integrity of superannuation of members’ money is being watered down so the Labor government can try and hide what super funds are spending their money on when it comes to political donations, when it comes to football sponsorships.”

Mr Robert has written to crossbenchers urging them to support itemized disclosure and disallow Labor’s proposal for less detail, which has been drawn up as a draft regulation.

The government said there would still be a requirement for super funds to disclose payments to industrial bodies, including unions and employer associations, but it would be an aggregate figure and not itemised.

Watch this story on 7:30 tonight on ABC TV and ABC iview.

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Categories
Sports

Serena Williams, 23-time grand slam women’s singles champion, hints at retirement from tennis

Serena Williams says she is “evolving away from tennis” as she hinted at retiring from the sport she dominated for much of her career with 23 women’s grand slam singles titles.

On Monday, Williams played only her second singles match since she returned to action at Wimbledon in June after a year-long absence from competition, beating Spain’s Nuria Parrizas Diaz in straight sets to reach the second round of the Toronto Open.

The 40-year-old won her last grand slam crown in 2017 and has been chasing an elusive 24th title that would see her draw level with Australia’s Margaret Court, who holds the record for most majors.

“I have never liked the word retirement,” Williams wrote in a Vogue article.

“It doesn’t feel like a modern word to me. I’ve been thinking of this as a transition but I want to be sensitive about how I use that word, which means something very specific and important to a community of people.

“Maybe the best word to describe what I’m up to is evolution. I’m here to tell you that I’m evolving away from tennis, toward other things that are important to me.

“A few years ago I quietly started Serena Ventures, a venture capital firm. Soon after that, I started a family. I want to grow that family.”

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Sports

Sydney’s Josh Kennedy calls time on illustrious career after another hamstring injury

Sydney Swans champion Josh Kennedy has called time on his illustrious AFL career, days after suffering another hamstring injury.

The 34-year-old midfielder will call it quits at the end of the season, and will give an update on his injury when he fronts the media on Tuesday.

Kennedy played in the Swans’ VFL game against North Melbourne on Sunday as he eyed a return to the senior team but walked off the Arden St oval in pain.

Swans coach John Longmire said after the club’s AFL win over the Kangaroos that Kennedy would have scans on his hamstring to determine any damage.

“It was on the other side (the left), it’s not the [right] hamstring he did early in the season,” Longmire said.

The former co-captain tore his hamstring in the Swans’ round 10 game against Carlton and was sidelined for eight weeks.

Kennedy was an unused sub in the thumping Sydney derby win over GWS in round 20.

The veteran, who has played 290 games, will fall just short of reaching the 300-game milestone.

Josh Kennedy holds the premiership cup above his head in front of Swans fans, while wearing sunglasses and a backwards cap
Josh Kennedy parades the 2012 premiership cup.(Getty Images: Mark Metcalfe)

He has played 13 games for Hawthorn, the club his father and grandfather were icons at, but moved to the Swans in 2010 to seek greater opportunities.

The three-time All-Australian has played 277 games for the Swans, including the club’s 2012 grand final win over the Hawks.

It comes after West Coast legend Josh Kennedy played the last of his 292 games on Sunday, kicking eight goals in his farewell match against Adelaide.

AAP

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Categories
Sports

Inside the Game: Hard work, sharp skills, high footy IQ and getting better after 30 — how David Mundy found the fountain of youth

For centuries, nay millennia, people have been obsessed with finding the fountain of youth. Rich mythology from the times of Alexander the Great and the legends of Greek history onwards have spoken about the quest for eternal youth.

Conquistador Juan Ponce de León was said to have been searching for the fabled fountain in the 16th century when he met his untimely demise in Florida, becoming an early example of “Florida Man”.

Perhaps Ponce de León would have been better off searching in and around Seymour: That’s where David Mundy hails from. Despite the endless march of the clock, Mundy seems to get better each year.

On Monday, Mundy called time on his illustrious and lengthy career. Since 2005, Mundy has been a rock for the tribe in purple, a constant force.

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His journey is unique, aging like a portrait of Dorian Gray and following a path that few, if any, players had forged before.

Blue Mundy

Mundy’s place as one of the competition’s best midfielders in the 2020s would have been utterly inconceivable in late 2004. Back then, Mundy was a talented junior player plying his trade for a talented Murray Bushrangers’ side, as well as for Vic Country.

A Fremantle player holds the ball in front of him as he looks downfield while a Sydney player grabs onto his shirt.
David Mundy started his career with the Dockers in 2005 in defense.(Getty Images: Adam Pretty)

But Mundy wasn’t playing through the middle, instead playing as a full-back.

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A surplus of talented midfielders for the Bushrangers led the coaches to call for volunteers to play down back. The selfless Mundy volunteered for the new role, and he thrived in it.

Mundy started his career in defense, with his first AFL season ending with third place on the Rising Star list.

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But Mundy’s future was in the middle, a move that has paid dividends. His years in defense improved his ability to read the flight and bounce of the ball. Mundy is able to snatch the ball from the grasp of opponents at will.

His teammates — such as longtime teammate Michael Walters — attribute his ongoing ability to his footy IQ.

“He’s one of the smartest players I’ve ever played with. He knows his way around the footy field which obviously gives him the longevity,” Walters said last year.

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On the field Mundy shapes as the hardest worker out there, often jumping and reacting before others can get a jump on the play. It’s perhaps why his game has aged so well, reliant less on speed than smarts.

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That’s not to discount his athletic abilities. One of the reasons that Mundy was a credible, tall defender was his sheer size and strength. At 193cm and 93kgs, Mundy was arguably one of the first of the current wave of “big bodied midfielders”, paving the way for Patrick Cripps, Marcus Bontempelli and Christian Petracca.

A dot map of David Mundy's disposals in the 2022 AFL season, with blue dots for kicks and orange dots representing handballs.
David Mundy’s disposal locations in 2022.(Supplied: Cody Atkinson and Sean Lawson)

Few can win the ball on the inside then drill the perfect ball down the throat of a leading forward. Mundy is able to release the ball to teammates via pinpoint handballs or shred opposition defenses via foot, with his disposal skills getting sharper over time.

He’s also got a knack of impacting the game when it matters.

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Mundy stands almost alone for how his game has aged and improved over time. His 20 Brownlow Medal votes last year was the most of his career, and the most for a player over 34 years of age since 1985.

help the aged

Major milestones have become a regular occurrence for footy fans in recent years. Of the 98 players to play in at least 300 games, 63 have played in the 2000s.

In the past three years, the 10 “oldest” sides in VFL/AFL history have all been fielded by the ladder-leading Geelong.

The rules about player age and performance are being rewritten on a yearly basis, with improved fitness regimes and sports science programs as a contributing factor.

However, the long hangover from the Coulter Law — instituted in 1930’s VFL, capping payments and outlawing sign-on bonuses and other inducements — and lessons learned from it, might have finally eased on selection panels and recruiting departments across the league.

In the last round of the 1947 season, Melbourne spearhead Fred Fanning walked off the field triumphantly after kicking 18 goals in an afternoon of footy.

Despite the Fuchsias missing the finals by a game, Melbourne had real hope for the future, led by their 25-year-old goal master.

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However, it would be Fanning’s last game in the red and blue. Fanning received an offer for at least three times more money to play and coach in his wife’s home town of Hamilton. Fanning led his new club to a premiership immediately and kicked bags of goals for years to come.

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Fanning was far from the only player to leave the VFL in their prime. Peter Box is the only Bulldog to win a Brownlow Medal and a Premiership and was just 25 years old when he played his last VFL game. Box left for more money in towns like Goreng Goreng and Narrandera, where he dominated the competition.

The Coulter Law, in existence from 1930 to 1970, limited players to a meager wage, three pounds, for much of the time. Players would often build a platform in the VFL, before chasing proper professionalism in the VFA or lower leagues.

That law chased older and successful players out of the game, and gave clubs with good commercial contacts a huge edge.

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Categories
Sports

West Coast Eagles star player Josh Kennedy announces retirement

Veteran West Coast Eagles forward Josh Kennedy has confirmed Sunday’s home game against Adelaide will be his last in the AFL.

Kennedy, 34, will depart the game as West Coast’s leading goal kicker, a three-time All-Australian, dual Coleman medalist and premiership player.

He was an integral part of the club’s 2018 premiership side as West Coast’s only multiple goal kicker on the day, with three crucial majors.

He also had 18 disposals and took 11 marks as the Eagles claimed their fourth premiership.

Drafted by Carlton at pick No.4 overall from East Fremantle in 2005, Kennedy played 22 games for the Blues before somewhat reluctantly agreeing to be involved in the famous trade that sent West Coast premiership captain Chris Judd to the Blues at the end of 2007.

Josh Kennedy high fives Jack Darling after kicking a goal
Josh Kennedy (right) said his body had taken enough.(AAP: Richard Wainwright)

After a stellar career spanning 17 seasons, Kennedy said his body has had enough.

“My knee is a big reason for retiring. I think my drive to play is still there, but I’m realistic my body is not going to be able to take me to another season,” he said.

“To be able to farewell West Coast supporters one last time at Optus Stadium and say thank you for the incredible support over the years will be the perfect way to finish my career.”

Club farewells ‘one of the greats’

West Coast CEO Trevor Nisbett said the club was blessed to have had Kennedy for the last 15 seasons.

“We have been fortunate to have many great players come through the doors of our club over our 35 years and Josh ranks with the best of them,” he said.

West Coast Eagles Chief Executive Officer Trevor Nisbett speaks at a press conference
Trevor Nisbett says Josh Kennedy will leave a lasting legacy.(AAP Image/Richard Wainwright)

“His achievements compare to the greatest in the history of the game. He is our highest-ever goal kicker and one of our most durable players.

“But his on-field achievements are only part of the story. He has been a guiding light for our younger players, but also a significant contributor across the broader community.”

Coach Adam Simpson said Kennedy was loved by his teammates and would go into history books as one of the greatest players.

“Josh is going to be one of the game’s greats and one of the club’s greats,” he said.

Adam Simpson walks across the field with his head down and hands in his pockets
West Coast coach Adam Simpson says Josh Kennedy has been instrumental in the club’s success.(AAP: Darren England)

“What he’s done in my time at the club, it’s just been a pleasure to see and watch. Coleman Medals, the ability to stand up in big games. Clutch, not just goals, but clutch moments.”

Sunday’s game against the Crows will be his 292th AFL game.

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