That's exactly what I thought too!
On a more serious note - although I agree in principle with the PPR being included (or at least over a certain value) in means testing for the age pension - there is also the human/emotional factor to consider.
My mother is 82, receives a small part pension and is mainly self-funded. She is a widow living in the same 4 bedroom house that has been her home for over 30 years. It is too large for her, is surplus to her needs and if sold for a more suitably sized (and easier for her to maintain) home would no doubt result in her becoming ineligible for any age pension. Most of the prior arguments are in favour of just such a course, and in theory I agree that downsizing would make perfect sense. However.... What makes sense intellectually is not always what can actually be considered emotionally. My mother's home was a fairly modest home when built over 30 years ago, in what used to be an outer suburb of Brisbane. Due to no fault of her own, it is now in a sought-after suburb and has increased in value substantially. She is emotionally attached to it - it has been her home for many years, she has lived and loved in it, cared for it, spent way too many hours tending its gardens, and every nook and cranny holds precious memories for her. She has developed excellent relationships with her neighbours (important when you are an elderly lady living on your own) and has been visiting the same medical centre, dentist etc for years. It would be a very brave government that would tell her, and her family, that despite having paid taxes all her (and my father's) working lives and having lived within their means in order to pay off a mortgage, raise future tax-payers, and save enough to be almost fully self-funded, that because she's drawing a part pension she must either sell her home or give up the part pension she receives. There would be an outcry the likes of which I can only imagine. It would be absolute political suicide. And to be honest, although I agree it makes perfectly logical sense to means-test the family home, I don't think it's actually
fair in a lot of cases.
An
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