Skip to content
Finance Investment, Political

Super funds with representative governance deliver $33 billion in extra value for Australians

Super Members Council 2 mins read

New analysis from the Super Members Council shows that super funds governed by representative trustee models deliver superior investment returns, generating $33 billion in additional value for their members over the past five years compared to funds with other governance models.

The findings are in the Council’s latest report, Member First Representation: The Profit to Member Governance Advantage, which highlights the long-term performance benefits to members of boards built on equal representation from employers and employees.

The equal representation model ensures diverse voices, strong accountability, and decision making focused squarely on the fund members’ best financial interests.

The Council’s latest analysis shows that representative governance models are the backbone of the world’s leading retirement systems. Countries such as the Netherlands, Denmark and Finland are all ranked among the strongest globally and use similar governance frameworks to Australia’s profit-to-member super funds.

The report sets out clear evidence on how representative governed funds have outperformed their non-representative peers on major measures of benefits to members.

Across the five-year period to June 2025, representative governed funds generated $33 billion in net additional value for members, while other sectors collectively recorded losses. For a typical Australian with $50,000 in super, this performance gap translates into an extra $1,900 in their super over five years.

The report also confirms this is not a short-term trend - it is part of a long-term track record of outperformance by funds governed through member centred board structures.

Funds with representative governance have a strong history of keeping fees low and running efficiently. Over the past 20 years, they’ve charged members less in administration and operating costs than other funds, which means more money stays with their members to earn them even stronger investment returns.

Representative funds typically invest more heavily in unlisted assets such as infrastructure, private credit and private equity—diversifying portfolios in ways that deliver stronger, long-term, risk-adjusted returns for members.

These diversified strategies also contribute to enhanced stability during market shocks, including the Global Financial Crisis, when representative funds have delivered lower volatility and stronger recoveries.

Strong governance continues to be central to protecting and growing Australians’ savings as Australia faces into demographic changes, rising cyber and geopolitical risks, and amid greater regulatory scrutiny. The representative model is strongly placed to navigate these trends and maintain system-wide trust.

“Lower fees, stronger long-term returns and more resilient diversified investment strategies all flow from a representative governance model that puts members’ interests at its very heart,” says the Council’s CEO Misha Schubert. “These funds exist for one reason only – to benefit their members.”

“The representative governance model delivers diversity in insights, lived experience, skills and expertise that strengthen board decision-making, which is unified by a strong shared member-first values and ethos.”


About us:

The opinions above are those of the author in their capacity as spokesperson for Super Members Council of Australia (SMC). SMC, the authors and all other persons involved in the preparation of this information are thereby not giving legal, financial or professional advice for individual persons or organisations.

Media

More from this category

  • Finance Investment
  • 04/02/2026
  • 07:05
Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand

Remuneration Survey shows members seeking balance

4 February 2026 Working in more than 660 different roles – if you thought accountants were onlycrunching numbers – then think again. The 2025 CA ANZ Remuneration Survey reveals that balancing work and life istop of mind for members. Here’s what employers can do to attract and retain talent – and what employeescan do to secure the move from ‘role reality’ to ‘perfect position’. Chartered Accountants have long been seen as the stewards of financial integrity, but the2025 Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand (CA ANZ) Remuneration Surveypaints a far more diverse and dynamic picture. This year’s survey, capturing responses…

  • Contains:
  • Finance Investment, Political
  • 04/02/2026
  • 06:05
Super Members Council

Shield and First Guardian collapses spotlight need for Federal Budget to fast-track stronger super protections

The Super Members Council is urging the Australian Government to fast-track and fund a comprehensive package of stronger super consumer protections in the 2026 Budget to safeguard Australians’ life savings. The Council warns the high-profile collapses of Shield and First Guardian – in which 12,000 Australians lost $1 billion in high-risk products - have shown the need for urgent reforms to strengthen consumer protections and close regulatory gaps to prevent such disasters from happening in the first place. The package of protections should include a crackdown on aggressive selling of super products through social media ads and cold calling, and…

  • Contains:
  • Finance Investment, Government Federal
  • 03/02/2026
  • 18:05
ACOSS

Governments must go further to reduce prices to curb inflation

To curb inflation, Governments must do more to directly reduce prices, ACOSS said following today’s interest rate rise. “Government spending is not to blame for higher inflation. But governments can and should take further action to bring down costs for people doing it tough, including by further reducing out-of-pocket specialist and dental care costs as well as child care and aged care fees, capping rent increases, and covering solar subsidies on consumers’ power bills. This would help prevent further rate rises.” said ACOSS CEO Cassandra Goldie. “By contrast, major spending cuts would have little impact on inflation and only hurt…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.