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Freezing deeming rates: What it means for pensioners

May 08, 2022
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What are deeming rates and how do they affect the pension. Source: Getty

The Coalition and Labor have made matching promises to freeze the deeming rate for two years for pensioners, in a bid to help ease the rising cost of living.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) revealed pensioners are suffering the most from the current cost of living, with annual household costs sitting at 4.9 per cent for the demographic.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) released its decision to increase interest rates for the first time in 11 years from 0.10 per cent to 0.35 per cent, to keep up with the rising costs.

So, what is deeming?

As part of the income test for welfare payments like the pension, deeming is a set of rules the government uses to determine how much income people earn from financial assets such as shares, superannuation, and bank accounts.

Regardless of whether or not people are actually seeing a return on these financial assets, deeming assumes people are receiving a set income from the interest on those investments.

When the deeming rate is low, people are able to earn more from their financial assets, however, if it’s high, anything earnt above that rate isn’t counted in the income test for the age pension.

That means if your investment return is higher than the deemed rate, the government won’t count that extra money as part of your income.

What is the current deeming rate?

Singles: $53,600 of investments have the deemed rate of 0.25 per cent applied with anything over $53,600 deemed to earn 2.25 per cent.

A couple with at least one person on the pension:  Any financial assets over $89,000 are deemed to earn 2.25 per cent with anything under $89,000 having the deemed rate of 0.25 per cent applied.

Election promises

Prime Minister Scott Morrison says freezing the deeming rate for pensioners could potentially leave older Australians with an extra $1300 a year.

“This is another shield to help protect Australians from the cost-of-living pressures people could feel from an increase in interest rates,” Morrison said.

“In addition to our indexation of social security payments, we will guarantee the rate of income for people who could otherwise see their social security income drop because of the increase in interest rates.”

Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese said Labor (ALP) is the government that pensioners know and trust to freeze the deeming rate.

“Between March 2015 to July 2019, interest rates fell four times but the government didn’t adjust the deeming rates once,” a statement by the ALP said.

“The coalition’s record shows they cannot be trusted to deliver for older Australians and pensioners. Scott Morrison cut the pension for around 370,000 pensioners, scrapped pensioner concessions, and he tried to raise the pension age to 70.

“The reality is that cost of living pressures have reached crisis levels on Scott Morrison’s watch. Now, he is having to do a patch-up job.”

Senior advocacy groups have called on the government to relax the income limit for pensioners, saying the current limit of $180 per fortnight for singles and a combined total of $320 per fortnight for couples is unfair.

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“Many seniors are struggling to make ends meet on the pension but the pension rules are a strong disincentive to do paid work. This traps pensioners at low quality of life including too many in poverty,” said National Seniors’ CEO and Director of Research Professor John McCallum.

MP Bob Katter has backed the call for the income limit to be lifted, saying “life is impossible for pensioners” with the current limit.

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“People who have worked their whole lives for our nation can’t afford to live on the pension payment they are getting now. Some people on the pension did not have superannuation for most of their working life,” he said.

 

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