
Pension giant warns against using super as piggybank

Australia’s largest superannuation fund, AustralianSuper, has called on the Australian Government to build assets to sell to long-term investors but not to use the A$4.3 trillion (US$2.8 trillion) super industry as a ‘piggybank’. Chief Executive Paul Schroder said super could contribute to national renewal, but its potential to be an engine room of Australia’s sustained prosperity was unrealised. “This isn’t and can’t be about Government telling funds what to,” he said in a speech to the National Press Club in Canberra. “I’ve said this behind closed doors and in front of the cameras and I’ll say it again – it would be a disaster for members if governments tried to tell us what to invest in.” Treasurer Jim Chalmers has urged super funds to consider investing in nation-building projects like affordable housing and the energy transition, but funds have pushed back, arguing their obligation is to act in the best financial interests of members. AustralianSuper manages more than $385 billion for more than 3.5 million members. Schroder said the Government’s job was determining the direction of the country and the services and infrastructure that underpinned it while the job of super funds was to deploy capital into prod