President Donald Trump just gave Australia's retirement system a serious thumbs-up, and it's got people wondering whether American workers might soon be looking at a very different way to save for their golden years.
What Trump Said About the Australian Model
Trump didn't mince words when discussing Australia's superannuation system. "We're looking at it very seriously. It has worked out very well; it's a good plan," he told reporters. He pointed to Australia's A$4.1 trillion ($2.70 trillion) retirement savings pool as of May 2025 as proof the model works.
Importantly, Trump clarified this isn't about children "necessarily" but rather for working people. When pressed about whether he specifically meant the superannuation scheme, Trump confirmed: "That's what they're talking about, yep."
The big question nobody's answered yet? Whether this would work alongside America's long-established 401(k) system or potentially replace it. The administration hasn't laid out those details.
The Dell Donation That Started the Conversation
Trump's comments on Tuesday followed a blockbuster announcement from Michael Dell, the billionaire founder of Dell Technologies Inc. (DELL), and his wife Susan. The couple pledged $6.25 billion to fund new government-backed Trump-branded investment accounts for children. That money is set to benefit up to 25 million children aged 10 and under living in areas where the median income falls below $150,000.
This came on the heels of the Invest America Act passing through Congress. Altimeter Capital CEO Brad Gerstner called it a transformational "401(k) from birth." Positioned as the centerpiece of Trump's "Main Street agenda," the Act aims squarely at closing the wealth gap between everyday Americans and the investment class.
How Australia's System Actually Works
Here's what makes Australia's approach different: employers are required by law to contribute to private "superannuation" accounts for their workers. The money gets invested, grows over time, and stays locked until retirement. It's basically a mandatory nationwide savings program that supplements the public age pension. Workers can voluntarily add extra contributions if they want, and the balances compound through investment returns over decades.
The numbers are impressive. According to the Australian government, the country's superannuation system manages the world's fourth-largest pool of pension assets—bigger than the combined sovereign wealth funds of the UAE and Saudi Arabia. That's remarkable for a country with only about 26 million people.
Australia Has Been Pitching Hard
This didn't happen by accident. Australia has been actively promoting its superannuation system to US officials and investors as a major capital source. Ambassador Kevin Rudd has been leading the charm offensive. In February, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent attended a dedicated superannuation summit in Washington, where he praised the "sustainable" and "regular" growth of Australia's pension funds.
Whether the Trump administration can translate that enthusiasm into actual policy remains to be seen. But the fact that the president is talking about it publicly suggests it's moved beyond the exploratory phase into something more concrete.