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English turns superannuation into political football

Author
Issac Davison of the NZ Herald, Newstalk ZB staff,
Publish Date
Mon, 6 Mar 2017, 5:55AM
(Getty Images).

English turns superannuation into political football

Author
Issac Davison of the NZ Herald, Newstalk ZB staff,
Publish Date
Mon, 6 Mar 2017, 5:55AM

UPDATED 7.43am Prime Minister Bill English may have turned superannuation into a political football in election year after hinting his Government is looking at changes to the scheme.

LISTEN ABOVE: Superannuation researcher Michael Littlewood and Newstalk ZB political editor Barry Soper speak to Mike Hosking

English said on the weekend that his Government had an "opportunity for a bit of a reset"  on superannuation because he had not made the same undertaking as his predecessor John Key to leave eligibility rules alone.

He would not go into more detail, except to say the Government was "working through the long term affordability" of New Zealand Super and that voters would know about the his intentions ahead of the general election on September 23.

His comments in an interview with Three's The Nation were seized on by Labour and New Zealand First, who said they would "alarm" households and that he needed to give voters more certainty about his plans.

They were also described as evasive by support party Act, whose leader David Seymour said English needed to be more up-front with voters about the fact that a higher eligibility age was "inevitable" because of the costs of the scheme.

The cost of NZ Super is expected to triple in the next 20 years from $11 billion to $36 billion as more people reach the over-65 age-group and live for longer.

Any prospect of reform stalled under Key, who said he would resign rather than tighten eligibility rules.

But the Retirement Commissioner Diane Maxwell is among those wanting change to avoid "painful decisions" in future. Maxwell said in December the eligibility age should be raised gradually, Government contributions to the Fund should restart, and the residency requirement raised from 10 years to 25 years.

Labour leader Andrew Little said yesterday that Super entitlements were a very sensitive subject, and English's comments would worry New Zealanders.

"To continue with very vague language is at the very least clumsy, but will also cause considerable anxiety."

Little wants the eligibility age to stay the same but has promised to resume contributions in his first Budget if in power. Labour previously campaigned on a higher eligibility age but Little scrapped that policy when he became leader.

New Zealand First leader Winston Peters said he supported tighter rules for older immigrants, citing figures of 86,000 people who had claimed Super in the last 15 years after just 10 years in the country.

Peters said English was the latest to make "alarming noises" about the affordability of the NZ Super. The scheme was relatively affordable by OECD standards but New Zealanders were being "railroaded" into thinking it was unaffordable, he said.

However, the Herald's former economics editor Brian Fallow warned Super's costs were forecast to "head north" to unaffordable levels - 7.9 per cent of GDP by 2060.

English was right to review the cost of NZ Super, he said, but raising the age of eligibility alone would not be enough to address rising costs. The Government would also need to either introduce means-testing or change the way Super payments were calculated. At present, payments are tied to the average wage.

Superannuation researcher Michael Littlewood told Mike Hosking there's a lot of information we simply don't know.

He said we have no idea when people stop working, how they move from full-time employment to full-time retirement, the implications of the current age and what the implications of shifting that age might be.

"And my worry is that superannuation is now being thrust into this national debate, in an election year, when we really don't know what we're talking about."

- NZ Herald

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