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Why does Australia's super co-contribution reward after-tax saving behaviour rather than just low income on its own?
A taxpayer in Australia hears the government may add money to their super and assumes low income alone is enough. Please explain why the co-contribution still depends on how contributions are made and why that changes the planning.
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Why is Australia's first home super saver scheme more strategic than the slogan 'save for a house through super' makes it sound?
I am looking at Australia's first home super saver scheme and the simplified pitch sounds attractive. Please explain why the scheme can still work well while being more constrained than that slogan suggests, especially around which contributions count and how the release fits the purchase timeline.
Why can Australia's bring-forward rule feel helpful on the way in and restrictive later on?
I am considering a larger after-tax super contribution in Australia and people keep mentioning the bring-forward rule as if it were pure upside. Please explain why it can be useful and still reduce future flexibility if I trigger it too casually.
Why is Australia's carry-forward concessional rule a second chance with conditions, not a permanent safety net?
I have unused concessional cap amounts in Australia and people keep telling me I can just catch up later. Please explain why that idea is partly right and still more conditional than it sounds.
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