10-06-2014 12:02 PM - edited 10-06-2014 12:02 PM
This is simply theft of your money this policy that labor introduced
Government grabs $360 million from idle household bank accounts
THE federal government has seized a record $360 million from household bank accounts that have been dormant for just three years, prompting outrage in some quarters amid complaints that pensioners and retirees have lost deposits.
Figures from the Australian Security and Investments Commission (ASIC) show almost $360 million was collected from 80,000 inactive accounts in the year to May under new rules introduced by Labor.
The new rules lowered the threshold at which the government is allowed to snatch funds from accounts that remain idle from seven years to three years.
Pensioners and others saving for a rainy day have reported trying to access their savings only to discover their money had been seized by the government because it had been dormant for three years or more.
Australian Bankers Association chief executive Steven Munchenberg said the legislation was a ''rushed'' Labor budget-boosting exercise that angered customers whose accounts were not lost or forgotten.
Connie Franze, 68, and her disabled son, Vince, 45, are trying to reclaim their life savings of more than $12,000 that was taken by the government last June.
''I saved for 45 years … It was my carer's pension and his disability pension,'' said the Sydney retiree.
She opened the Commonwealth Bank account 45 years ago, squirrelling away a small portion of her $50-a-week earnings from growing plants. The pair were saving for a trip to Italy to visit her mother.
''She was 100 years old. I wanted to take money out. They wouldn't give me the money … [and then] my mother died this year. The last time I saw her was 20 years ago.''
10-06-2014 12:06 PM - edited 10-06-2014 12:07 PM
on 10-06-2014 12:09 PM
She left it a bit late to go visit her mum didn't she?
on 10-06-2014 12:10 PM
@am*3 wrote:
This part is very important:
"The money goes into the government's consolidated funds, but can be reclaimed at any time, by providing proof of identity to the bank, which reclaims the money via ASIC. The time taken for a return can be up to two months."
From the link in the opening post
Ah well Am - that little important bit of information wouldn't suit the agenda would it?
on 10-06-2014 12:14 PM
And it should also be noted that: The Treasury now looks poised to lengthen the threshold to five years in the face of fierce lobbying from the banking industry.
Well of course the banks are annoyed - they lose money out of the policy.
So isn't it just like the Liberal Govt to change the policy back so that the money gets squirreled away by the banks to add to their profits instead of being invested by the government.
10-06-2014 12:23 PM - edited 10-06-2014 12:24 PM
@am*3 wrote:
This part is very important:
"The money goes into the government's consolidated funds, but can be reclaimed at any time, by providing proof of identity to the bank, which reclaims the money via ASIC. The time taken for a return can be up to two months."
From the link in the opening post
it's a policy I don't like but at least people can get it returned with proof of identity.
the Abbott govt. has been unwinding policies and regulations for some months now, why haven't they uwound this one I wonder??
10-06-2014 12:24 PM - edited 10-06-2014 12:25 PM
on 10-06-2014 12:34 PM
on 10-06-2014 01:08 PM
If they were putting in money from the pension, as claimed, it would not be an inactive account and not be subject to the rules.
Are these real people of theoretical people for the sake of the story?
on 10-06-2014 01:13 PM
just another ridiculous headline, "theft" pfffft.