the actual order of withdraw is:
1. CPF RA
2. CPF SA
3. CPF OA
SA won't exist from early 2025 for everyone with a Retirement Account.
There's no RA withdrawal that occurs unless you explicitly request one — and in some cases have a sufficient property pledge or charge in place. Even today that's true. So I'm not sure what you mean by putting RA first in the order of withdrawal. That's not true today, and it won't be true in early 2025. RA withdrawals are separately requested.
This has the effect of giving me a higher income floor after 65, allowing me to more confidently draw down even more of my wealth portfolio, in the 10 years between 55 to 65, what we call the "go-go" years of retirement.
Yes, assured lifetime retirement income is liberating. Particularly if it's escalating. I wish more people would understand that.
I don't think I would be surprised if...
- CPF Life payout age is set at 70 for all instead of the option for 65 right now.
I wouldn't bet so.
I think it's slightly likely the Basic Healthcare Sum could be frozen at an older age than age 65. (Particularly with the recent rule change allowing disability income from MA) there's some logical sense in allowing people working past age 65 to continue growing their MAs.
- CPF life plan set at Escalating or all options have an escalating portion to manage inflation as folks grow older.
The payout plans have already changed since CPF LIFE was launched. Future plan changes are possible. But I think a joint payout plan is the most likely innovation.
- FRS increases even more over the years. It is already increasing and with this function, it is unlikely that people will be 'forced' to all have ERS. Just increase FRS instead.
BRS and FRS increases are already standard operating procedure. The 2025 ERS increase is unusual but a one-time event. (And ERS increases are purely good from an individual member point of view.) It's certainly possible for the pace of BRS/FRS/ERS increases to vary. And Basic Healthcare Sum increases, too.
- In fact, I would not be surprised if ERS is no longer a hard cap. Just slowly decrease the returns the more people put into RA and let people decide when it is worth it. They could show indicator bands. BRS-FRS how much is the payout. FRS-ERS slightly lower percentage payout. Abv ERS slightly lower again. Even at slightly lower payouts, there will be some who value the consistency of income enough to want to consider taking it up.
I doubt that. One of the major reasons to have an upper cap is to prevent wealthy people from shielding too many dollars from creditors and courts. I suppose there could be a separate asset protection cap, but that's messy.