He proposed it 34 years ago. On Tuesday, Paul Keating's plan comes to fruition
But the former treasurer and prime minister has given a subtle hint to Jim Chalmers that his planned changes to the tax arrangements on super accounts with more than $3 million will affect far more people than the government is claiming.
The super guarantee levy has increased half a percentage point every year since 2022, reaching 12 per cent with the 2025-26 financial year.
Keating was instrumental in the first step towards universal superannuation, when in 1985 the ACTU sought to have 3 per cent of industrial workers' wages go into retirement savings funds run jointly by union and employer groups.
Six years later, when he had moved to the backbench after his first failed leadership challenge against then-prime minister Bob Hawke, Keating first outlined what would become the country's retirement savings system.
He said retirement needed to be based on both the age pension and privately funded superannuation, nominating 12 per cent as the contribution from workers towards their retirement income.
At the time, he hoped the 12 per cent would be in place by 2000, noting that at such a level it would provide a retirement income that would be 'the difference between a full, active life and a life governed by budgetary exigencies and the vagaries of politics'.
Keating on Monday said the superannuation system had now matured with the 12 per cent guarantee, delivering Australia the fourth-largest retirement accumulation in the world at $4.1 trillion, which is 150 per cent of GDP.
The Reserve Bank has estimated super will reach $8 trillion by 2035, when Australia will have the second-largest retirement base in the world, behind only the United States.

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Sky News AU
35 minutes ago
- Sky News AU
More than three million Aussies to pocket about $277 this Dry July, research from comparison site Finder has revealed
Australians doing Dry July will not only improve the health of their liver but also their bank balances to the tune of $277, new research has revealed. Comparison site Finder has found that 20 per cent of Australian drinkers are cutting out grog this month for the annual Dry July sobriety run. With the average drinker forking out $69.40 per week on alcohol, according to Finder, the total savings will hit $277 for the month. The research found the weekly average spend on alcohol was down 35 per cent from $108.20 a year ago as cumulative cost of living pressures force Aussies to cut back on drinking. Finder's head of consumer research Graham Cooke said Dry July was a 'great opportunity' for Aussies to reset their financial habits alongside their health habits. 'Many Aussies don't realise how much money quietly disappears on drinks out with friends or a quiet bottle of wine in the evening,' Mr Cooke said. 'Cutting out alcohol for a month can easily save you hundreds of dollars – that's money that could go towards paying down debt, building your emergency fund or simply boosting your savings. 'Not only that, but your liver will start to repair itself after a couple of weeks – so the longer you stay off the booze, the better. 'It's great that it's becoming more acceptable to say no to a drink. Choosing to skip alcohol, whether for health or for financial reasons, doesn't mean you have to skip the fun.' Finder's research showed a whopping 3.2 million Aussies will take part in Dry July this year. That will put $886m back into the pockets of everyday Australians if all successfully complete the challenge. About 11 per cent of respondents to Finder's survey said they were completing Dry July for the first time while nine per cent said they had done it previously. The savings comes as alcohol inflation has continued to surge over the past year. Data from the Australian Bureau of Statistic showed the price of beer rose 4.5 per cent and the price of spirits jumped four per cent for the year up to March 2025. Alcohol and tobacco rose 6.5 per cent over 12 months while prices jumped 1.2 per cent in the March quarter.


7NEWS
2 hours ago
- 7NEWS
Millennials like me are turning 40. So, why don't we own a house yet?
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Perth Now
3 hours ago
- Perth Now
Demand for Russia to pay over MH17
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