JohnM
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I am another with an allergic reaction to whY
I thought most people on this forum shared the same allergy... .
I am another with an allergic reaction to whY
Did I say fully supported? They have savings. The savings are irrelevant. They worked hard and saved and helped 2 children along the way. Red rag to a bull? Sorry don't see it. Mum and dad couldn't work anymore so they retired. Centrelink advised and approved for my parents to be paid unemployment and then sickness benefit while they heard the case for disability which was eventually granted.I think its just that maybe it isnt a good thing to state that your parents retired, fully supported by Centrelink, at a very early age, and have enjoyed multiple trips to Greece and had virtually no savings. Can you not see that as a red rag to a bull?
I thought most people on this forum shared the same allergy... .
Did I say fully supported? They have savings. The savings are irrelevant. They worked hard and saved and helped 2 children along the way. Red rag to a bull? Sorry don't see it. Mum and dad couldn't work anymore so they retired. Centrelink advised and approved for my parents to be paid unemployment and then sickness benefit while they heard the case for disability which was eventually granted.
But instead of seeing this as a story of someone being able to survive on welfare payments it becomes an attack on ethics. The nastiness in some people shines through. Very sad.
Any else n being charged a REGULATORY EXPENSE RECOVERY FEE?
Not me but family members. :/
It is all relative. My dad retired at 52 and mum was not yet 50. They have been living on unemployment, sickness benefits or pension for the past 27 years. They have had multiple trips to Greece and have enough to buy food for 4 people and still able to save.
Oh and no superannuation income. My dad had ~$12,000 in the 80's when he stopped working and moved it all into a CBA super account and lost ~$2,000 in first year. Must have been around the time property crashed. Never again.
My observation as a wife and my husband (56) is suddenly at home 24/7, he slept a lot for the first couple of months. Got to the point that I asked if he was feeling ok, was depressed, why is he having daily naps, nightly naps, falling asleep in the car, on the couch. I would come home and he tells me he slept most of the day.
For the first 2 weeks I also thought I was going to have to kill him as he was all in my business and stuffing up my morning home routine.
Its been about 4 months now and hes finally settling in a new routine and happy with its direction. Morning exercise (hes lost weight already), once a week meet up with Group A (work friends related), once a month meet up activity with Group B (hobby #1), couple of times per month for hobby #2 meetup (Group C) and hes building on this.
My observation as a wife and my husband (56) is suddenly at home 24/7, he slept a lot for the first couple of months. Got to the point that I asked if he was feeling ok, was depressed, why is he having daily naps, nightly naps, falling asleep in the car, on the couch. I would come home and he tells me he slept most of the day.
For the first 2 weeks I also thought I was going to have to kill him as he was all in my business and stuffing up my morning home routine.
Its been about 4 months now and hes finally settling in a new routine and happy with its direction. Morning exercise (hes lost weight already), once a week meet up with Group A (work friends related), once a month meet up activity with Group B (hobby #1), couple of times per month for hobby #2 meetup (Group C) and hes building on this.
Not at all. My parents worked hard and paid their taxes and the jobs they were doing caused their disabilities. And another side effect of their hard work is both have very poor hearing as they were working in a printing factory for many years and there was no push for protection in those days.Yes you said they lived on unemployment, sickness and aged pension and no superannuation.
Maybe you see me as being nasty....
You're right again but no need for negatives.A classic example of not giving all the relevant information on which people were making judgements - had you said "my dad had to retire at 52 due to ill health and applied for the Disability Support Pension", then there may have been less "negative" comments. Giving relevant information always saves heartache...
Wise words from the master...I'm about to make a major top up to my Super.
I am still annoyed that the top personal tax rate is 49% but a couple can shelter $3.2 million in super and have a 15% tax rate on the excess.
Salary sacrificing early in your life is a pretty good idea as 9.5% compulsory super contributions won't get you enough for a comfortable retirement.
Thanks cove. So currently we are receiving the transition payments and both over 60 and still working. So any tax on the SG contributions? Won't ever reach the $3.2 million in super though.Yes when you go "transition to retirement" the taxes cease unless you have way more than the $3.2 million a couple is allowed.
The tax rate on the larger balances will be 15% which is a bit better than 49% this year for the highest personal rate.
Question for the brains trust. Work longer hours throughout your mid years and retire early, or shorter hours for longer? I used to think the former was better but now, having missed a lot of my childrens' youth and seeing a substantial proportion of any incremental salary disappear in tax, I'm thinking the latter may be a better plan.