Defaults, decumulation and democracy

Former UK pensions minister Guy Opperman says a “decumulation disaster” is looming for Australian superannuation fund members, but it could be averted through the use of hard defaults into retirement income options.

In the first episode of the new Retirement Magazine Pension Policy Series podcast, produced in partnership with Generation Life, Opperman warns that Australia has millions of people “coming over the hill” into retirement with no plan to manage it. The Retirement Income Covenant alone is not enough – he says a strategy without implementation is meaningless, and that there is “a problem on advice and guidance”.

In conversation with Conexus Financial editor-in-chief Aleks Vickovich, and The Conexus Institute’s Jeremy Cooper and David Bell, Opperman says the superannuation system excels at accumulation but it fails members at the point where they need most help.

Opperman, who served as Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Pensions between 2017 and 2022 in the May and Johnson Conservative governments, argues hard defaults could work for members like a defined-benefit pension.

They also discuss the UK Labour government’s proposed pension reforms and the perennial ‘climate wars’ in Canberra.

Leave a Comment

The biggest game in town: Inside AustralianSuper’s retirement income strategy

The biggest game in town: Inside AustralianSuper’s retirement income strategy

Since Jacki Ellis joined the nation’s biggest profit-to-member super fund as head of retirement just over one year ago, she’s been assessing and building the fund’s capabilities with the aim of delivering a fully personalised experience to all members by 2035. But that’s not to say there won’t be benefits for members who retire before that.

Sort content by