Commonwealth Numbered Regulations - Explanatory Statements

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SUPERANNUATION (PRODUCTIVITY BENEFIT) (2002-2003 FIRST INTEREST FACTOR) DECLARATION 2002 2002 NO. 133

EXPLANATORY STATEMENT

STATUTORY RULES 2002 No. 133

SUPERANNUATION (PRODUCTIVITY BENEFIT) ACT 1988

ISSUED BY THE AUTHORITY OF THE MINISTER FOR FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION

DECLARATION UNDER PARAGRAPH 3E(1)(a)

SUPERANNUATION (PRODUCTIVITY BENEFIT) (2002-2003 FIRST INTEREST FACTOR) DECLARATION 2002

The Superannuation (Productivity Benefit) Act 1988 (the PB Act) provides the mechanism by which the Superannuation Guarantee (SG) minimum employer superannuation support is made available to Commonwealth sector employees (and certain other employees) who have no other employer-sponsored superannuation cover. Prior to 1 July 1992, the PB Act provided productivity superannuation to these employees.

Since 1 July 1990, the designated employers of employees covered by the PB Act arrangements have been required to pay periodic contributions in respect of those employees to a superannuation fund nominated or approved by the Minister for Finance and Administration. Where the employee is eligible, contributions may be paid to another regulated superannuation fund as defined by the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993. The contribution rates are set down in the PB Act or in instruments under the PB Act.

Employers are also required to pay to the same fund, on a once only basis, any entitlement accrued by the employee under the then Superannuation Benefit (Interim Arrangement) Act 1988 in respect of employment with that employer before 1 July 1990.

The contributions provided for under the PB Act are guaranteed to employees where an employer fails to join an employee to a scheme. The employer is required to pay extra amounts as interest on those contributions, to take account of loss of interest arising because contributions have not been paid to a fund on behalf of the employee.

Paragraph 3E(1)(a) of the PB Act requires the Minister to declare before each financial year the factor ascertained using a specified formula that is to be the declared first interest factor for that year. Subsection 3E(2) of the Act provides that the formula is to involve the use of a rate specified in the declaration and may contain a variable that depends on the period, or another aspect, of the employment of the person in relation to whom the factor is to apply.

The first interest factor is used in subsection 8A(2) of the PB Act to determine the amount that is to accrue during all or part of a financial year on amounts which should have been paid to a superannuation fund as contributions in that year but were not paid.

This Declaration cited as the Superannuation (Productivity Benefit) (2002-2003 First Interest Factor) Declaration 2002 specifies that the rate to be used in the formula for the 2002-2003 year is 0.0610, which is the 10 year Treasury Bond rate at April 2002 expressed as a decimal.

The effect of the formula is to accrue interest in a manner similar to that which would have applied if the contributions had been paid into a fund in regular payments throughout the year. The formula provides for interest to accrue on a daily basis on each amount which should have been paid (but was not) to a fund during the period 1 July 2002 to 30 June 2003 at half the rate set out in the declaration. The halving of the interest rate recognises that the full interest rate only applies for a full year, and applies for progressively shorter periods to moneys which would have been payable late in the year.

The Declaration commences on gazettal.


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