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Motion to split controversial super bill could work in sector’s favour

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By Keeli Cambourne
December 04 2024
1 minute read
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A motion to split the Treasury Laws Amendment (Better Targeted Superannuation Concessions and Other Measures) Bill 2023 could work in favour of forcing amendments to the Division 296 tax.

The bill as it currently stands imposes an additional 15 per cent tax on a proportion of earnings relating to super balances over $3 million from 1 July 2025 as well as disclosure requirements in the ACNC Act that seek to increase public transparency of Australian charities and not-for-profits.

Additionally, the present bill allows for the Corporations Act to provide limited exemptions for foreign financial services to hold an AFSL.

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The split motion was put forward on 27 November by WA Liberal senator Dean Smith, who is also the chair of the standing committee for the scrutiny of bills.

Senator Smith proposed that the bill be divided into two bills and amended in accordance with the amendments on sheet 3191.

These two bills would be:

· Treasury Laws Amendment (Better Targeted Superannuation Concessions) Bill 2023, which contains the Division 296 tax measure in schedules 1 to 3 to the original bill.

· Treasury Laws Amendment (Miscellaneous Measures) Bill 2024, which contains all remaining measures, such as the disclosure requirements in the ACNC Act and AFSL changes included in schedules 4 to 8 to the original bill.

SMSF Association CEO Peter Burgess said the original bill contained some non-controversial amendments that have nothing to do with super.

“These amendments are being held up due to the controversy around Division 296,” he said.

“The Senate agreed to split the bill so the non-controversial amendments could proceed as a separate bill, which should actually help our cause.”

He continued the bill split motion passed on 28 November, however, the bills were not debated.

“That will occur on the next sitting day as per the motion. The motion requires that further consideration of each bill be an order of the day for the next day of sitting,” he said.

“It means the Division 296 bill will be considered on the first sitting day back unless an election is called beforehand.”

In the final sitting week of Parliament for the year, the government attempted to guillotine the bill but the motion suffered a defeat in the Senate.

After tense negotiations between Labor, the Greens, and Senate independents, the government then scaled back its original agenda, cutting 36 bills down to a package of 27 pieces of legislation and excluding the controversial tax on super balances over $3 million.

Finance Minister Katy Gallagher assured that the changes to Division 296 remain Labor policy but conceded that the bill faces opposition in the Senate, calling the upper house “an obstructionist chamber”.

“There’s a big cross bench with different views, we’ve got an opposition that doesn’t want to work with the government, that wants to stop progress, but we are going to be fighting right up to the end,” Minister Gallagher said.

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