time
Storage? I am Storage!
My god, you people talk a lot of crap.
Retirement benefits, or superannuation as it's otherwise known, are part of the contract between employer and employee. That is, the employee effectively sacrifices part of their salary in return for an employer contrbution to a pension fund, as well as the resulting tax benefit. The employee's direct contribution allows them to regulate the amount according to their current circumstances.
In Australia, employer contributions are a legal requirement, an effort to ensure there's sufficient national savings to support retirees in the future so that the government doesn't have to.
The point is that these pension funds are supposed to be fully funded, i.e. the employer is supposed to pay the money as they go rather than defer the commitment. Again, this is legally mandated in Australia.
Unfortunately, some companies have traditionally raided employee pension funds to prop themselves up, but it's not really their money. I believe this is illegal in many countries.
So if it cost $1300 per car in the past, that shouldn't have any bearing on what the cost is in the future, unless the companies have been deferring their liabilities or raiding the pension funds ...
Retirement benefits, or superannuation as it's otherwise known, are part of the contract between employer and employee. That is, the employee effectively sacrifices part of their salary in return for an employer contrbution to a pension fund, as well as the resulting tax benefit. The employee's direct contribution allows them to regulate the amount according to their current circumstances.
In Australia, employer contributions are a legal requirement, an effort to ensure there's sufficient national savings to support retirees in the future so that the government doesn't have to.
The point is that these pension funds are supposed to be fully funded, i.e. the employer is supposed to pay the money as they go rather than defer the commitment. Again, this is legally mandated in Australia.
Unfortunately, some companies have traditionally raided employee pension funds to prop themselves up, but it's not really their money. I believe this is illegal in many countries.
So if it cost $1300 per car in the past, that shouldn't have any bearing on what the cost is in the future, unless the companies have been deferring their liabilities or raiding the pension funds ...