Prime Minister Christopher Luxon is scheduled to speak to media this morning following a visit to Griffins Foods in Papakura, Auckland.
The Prime Minister’s press conference will be held at roughly 10.30am and will be live streamed above.
Luxon, who has been unwell for the past few days, is expected to be accompanied by Finance Minister Nicola Willis.
He is likely to be asked questions about the Government’s Budget, including changes to KiwiSaver, as well as National’s view on lifting the superannuation age.
Willis said on Monday that the superannuation burden was growing.
“I think there are some benefits with universal superannuation … and if you are to make any change to that area we have to phase it in over a large period of time," she said.
National previously campaigned on increasing the superannuation age gradually over many years, but the party’s policy platform for the 2026 election has not yet been decided.
Willis also confirmed yesterday that government departments and agencies were assessing the potential cost of the decision to phase in increased employer contributions to KiwiSaver. The default rate will reach 4% by 2028.
She told RNZ any cost could be met with new spending in next year’s budget, or be covered through cuts.
Her comments came after the Green Party claimed the additional cost of potentially $700 million had not been accounted for in this year’s Budget, which Willis deemed “ludicrous”.
Green Party co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick claimed the Government had failed to account for what could be $633m-$714m in additional costs.
“If she’s honest with New Zealanders, that means the Government has intentionally hidden more than half a billion dollars extra in public service cuts to come,” Swarbrick said of Willis.
The potential financial burden for the Government is referenced in the Treasury’s Budget Economic and Fiscal Update, but it did not come with a cost estimate.
Willis claimed Swarbrick’s numbers were “out of whack” and “quite ludicrous” but acknowledged Crown agencies were currently assessing the “potential implications”.
“They’ll then provide advice to the Government. If additional funding is required, I expect it would have to take the form of a pre-commitment against next year’s budget operating allowance,” Willis said.
However, she later told RNZ it was possible any costs could be satisfied by cuts, while noting it was “far too soon to say”.
“It may be that we say this needs to be met with additional funding, it may be that we say there’s something we can reprioritise elsewhere.”
Willis said she expected all government contractual obligations, including those regarding KiwiSaver, to be met and suspected employer contributions would form part of future pay round negotiations.
She acknowledged the Government had “limited visibility” of what its KiwiSaver obligations were.
Swarbrick predicted the Government would cut spending from essential public services to make up the extra cost.
“If the Government doesn’t front up with the funds between now and April next year when the first set of changes come into force, Christopher Luxon and Nicola Willis will be forcing immediate cuts directly to frontline services in health, education and social services to pay for their fiscal hole.”
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