Super guarantee rate rise – rate based on when employee is paid

On 1 July 2021, the super guarantee rate will rise from 9.5 per cent to 10 per cent. Some pay periods will cross over between June and July when the rate changes. 

The ATO advises that the percentage employers are required to apply is determined based on when the employee is paid, not when the income is earnt.

The rate of 10 per cent will need to be applied for all salary and wages that are paid on and after 1 July 2021, even if some or all of the pay period it relates to is before 1 July 2021.

That means, if the pay period ends before 30 June, but the pay date falls on or after 1 July, the 10 per cent rate applies on those salary and wages which are ordinary time earnings. The date of salary and wage payment determines the rate of super guarantee payable, regardless of when the work was performed.
 

SMSF borrowing ban reversed

The Federal Government has overturned a longstanding ban on borrowing by self-managed superannuation funds (SMSF).

Many funds had, for years,been investing in instalment warrants until the Australian Taxation determined that some warrants constituted a borrowing by the fund.

Instalment warrants are now an eligible form of gearing for an SMSF, following an amendment to the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act that allows a gearing exception to the ban.

The amendment became effective late last month.

The asset must be one that the super fund trustee is permitted to acquire and hold directly.

The gearing exception covers unlisted and listed instalment warrants and certain geared acquisitions such as real estate.

It means SMSF trustees will potentially be able to borrow far more in order to buy shares or lifestyle assets, such as boats, cars, artwork and property.

An instalment warrant allows the buyer to pay an initial fee to acquire an underlying asset with an option to pay a second fee to acquire the legal title of that asset.

Before 1999, SMSFs could borrow through a unit trust arrangement, but Australia’s then prime minister, Paul Keating, overhauled the provision.

Townsends Business and Corporate Lawyers special counsel Michael Hallinan said it was possible the Federal Government had not realised the scope of the legislation.

Speaking at a seminar on October 17, Hallinan said the impact would go far beyond the title “investment by superannuation funds in instalment warrants”.

“Arrangements other than instalment warrants will be included in the borrowing provision,” Hallinan said.

Hallinan said lenders would have no recourse to sue an SMSF trustee for defaulting on the loan arrangement, for example, if a trustee borrowed to buy property.

“If a super fund defaults on the loan, the lender will use the mortgage to obtain the house,” he said.

Townsends principal Peter Townsend said SMSFs that could not afford to buy into the tough Sydney property market would now be able to.

Townsend said “Once the rubber hits the road, there’s going to be enormous interest in this,” .

Hallinan said the because the arrangements were more complex than normal gearing, they were likely to involve more parties and higher fees.