Posts Tagged ‘New Zealand Superannuation’

Our first publication – collecting Peter Harris on superannuation

Thursday, December 16th, 2010

I’m very pleased to announce our first online publication: a collection of the three guest-posts that Peter Harris wrote on superannuation and retirement savings issues back in May, June and August.

From my foreword:

National’s decision to suspend contributions to the New Zealand Superannuation Fund last year renewed fears about the sustainability of Superannuation. There are concerns, including amongst some progressives, that perhaps our ageing population means that we cannot afford to maintain the current wage relativity and universal entitlement from the age of 65 indefinitely.

This is an important issue for progressives (and all New Zealanders) to debate, and there’s no one more qualified to write about it than Peter. He has a long involvement with these issues from his time as economist for the Council of Trade Unions and later as economic adviser to Dr Michael Cullen. Following that, he went on to chair the Savings Product Working Group, whose report was the founding document for what evolved into the KiwiSaver scheme. His views on superannuation, savings and retirement are always worth hearing and considering carefully.

You can download a copy here.

Very handy for passing on to friends who refuse to read blogs!

Weekend reading, 20 August 2010

Friday, August 20th, 2010

Shaun Hendy – Picking Winners?

Back in March, at about the same time I was noting the differing views on the focus for science in New Zealand of Rod Oram and Paul Callaghan, Callaghan’s deputy at the MacDiarmid Institute, Shaun Hendy was rebutting Oram as well in his regular blog A Measure of Science on the Sciblogs site. I subsequently discovered his work through a series he did about the ideas of Philip McCann, and since then A Measure of Science has been a valued part of my regular reading list. This latest post is also about the focus of science, and also discusses McCann. Hendy, like me, attended a recent seminar by McCann (foreshadowed here), and he takes issue with McCann’s contention that New Zealand must pick winners if it wants its innovation spending to have any impact. I won’t do justice to his argument if I summarise or excerpt it, so I’ll just encourage you to read it!

Paul Krugman – Attacking Social Security

Leading progressive economist Paul Krugman this week mounted a defence of current provisions for retirement income in the US that closely parallels the arguments of our own Peter Harris. Krugman writes that:

an aging population will eventually (over the course of the next 20 years) cause the cost of paying Social Security benefits to rise from its current 4.8 percent of G.D.P. to about 6 percent of G.D.P. To give you some perspective, that’s a significantly smaller increase than the rise in defense spending since 2001, which Washington certainly didn’t consider a crisis, or even a reason to rethink some of the Bush tax cuts.

He is particularly strong on the issue of raising the age of entitlement:

The currently fashionable idea of raising the retirement age even more than it will rise under existing law — it has already gone from 65 to 66, it’s scheduled to rise to 67, but now some are proposing that it go to 70 — is usually justified with assertions that life expectancy has risen, so people can easily work later into life. But that’s only true for affluent, white-collar workers — the people who need Social Security least.

I’m not just talking about the fact that it’s a lot easier to imagine working until you’re 70 if you have a comfortable office job than if you’re engaged in manual labor. America is becoming an increasingly unequal society — and the growing disparities extend to matters of life and death. Life expectancy at age 65 has risen a lot at the top of the income distribution, but much less for lower-income workers.

StatsGuy (The Baseline Scenario) – Good Government vs. Less Government, Or: Why the Heritage Freedom Index is a Damned Statistical Lie

In a guest-post at The Baseline Scenario, StatsGuy does a wonderfully statistical analysis of the Heritage Freedom Index that right-wing commentators claim provides evidence for the efficacy of ’small government’. His conclusion:

The Heritage Freedom Index is really a composite of measures that get at two different things: Good Government, and Less Government. Overall, the Good Government factors tend to dominate, and drive a lot of the correlation with good economic and quality of life outcomes. When one splits out the factors, the case for Less/Weaker Government weakens substantially, and the case for Clean/Non-Corrupt/Efficient government strengthens considerably.

Rayhan Haque (Left Foot Forward) – Winning the argument on taxation is the key to reviving the left

Many of the references in this post are quite specific to the UK, but it’s still worth a read as the main points are fairly generalisable. Haque’s four principles that “should inform any new tax system for the left” are:

  • Firstly, it must be progressive.  This means seriously re-considering the merits of personal allowances.
  • Social justice is equally important. Taxation is one of the most powerful ways in which to shape socio-economic relations.
  • Public support for taxation is crucial in preventing alienation and disenchantment.
  • The final principle to shaping a new tax system is competiveness. Taxation should be used to forge a stronger, just and more sustainable economy.

Also:
Idiot/Savant (No Right Turn) - Against a split drinking age
Andrew Campbell (The Standard) - How to be a lazy politician
Matthew Yglesias – Yes, More Efficient Government Helps Taxpayers
Kevin Meagher (Left Foot Forward) - Kevin Meagher’s top five most influential left wingers
Hilary Wainwright - David and Ed Miliband – if you really want to move on, listen to your father

Super: time for a change?

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

This is the third in a set of posts on savings and pensions issues from Peter Harris. The other two posts in the series are Good policy process – the case of New Zealand Superannuation and Why compulsory savings should not be on the agenda.


The recent Retirement Commission/ Institute of Policy Studies workshop on retirement income and intergenerational equity reached three roughly uncontested conclusions, at least in respect to the New Zealand Superannuation scheme.

It is very effective at minimising poverty among the elderly. (Just how effective is contestable, but “the best in the world” is basically true). It is relatively cheap by international standards. It is not particularly effective in maintaining in retirement the incomes people earned when working. So we know it is effective and efficient.  It also protects the retired from inflation and longevity risk. (It is “the gold standard” as one international participant put it).

We should celebrate, not lament, the fact that it does not replicate in retirement all of the market inequities of working life. That should never be a role for the government. Countries that try to do that typically impose some form of compulsion on savings, and compensate with tax concessions on said savings. The net effect is no discernable reduction in pensioner poverty, a significant increase in the fiscal costs of retirement income policy, and a fair bit of transfer of savings into tax advantaged or legally obligatory vehicles, rather than an increase in savings levels. The policy becomes less efficient, and, if it ends up displacing some or all of universal tax funded pensions, less effective and more inequitable. (Advocates of compulsory KiwiSaver please note).

If there is an efficient and effective programme in place, it would seem to me that there has to be a high standard of evidence needed to erode it. The “evidence” tended to revolve around demographic projections suggesting that in 2060, there would be four people 65+ for every ten of working age, compared with only two now. That is a rhetorically powerful, but analytically bankrupt, comparison.

If this “ratio” is definitive as an indicator of fiscal sustainability, we have a problem that is of an order of magnitude greater than whether NZS is affordable. There will be fewer people of working age for every hospital patient, school pupil, university student, police officer, prison inmate, kilometre of road needed to be built, and so on. Admittedly, with most of those, the numbers that taxpayers need to support is not increasing at the same time, except for health, where dependency might well be increasing at an even greater rate.

The fact is that it is GDP that drives the tax base, and the tax base that determines the affordability of any and everything.

Changes in the demographic structure have to impact on GDP growth to be at all relevant to the debate, and then to a material extent. All we had at the workshop was a much less scary suggestion that changes in the demographic structure would reduce trend GDP growth from 3 to 2 percent per annum. But how robust is this projection?

My (admittedly sketchy) understanding of the Treasury model that reaches such conclusions is that it derives GDP growth  trend changes through a projection of hours worked and an assumed rate of productivity growth. If that is wrong, I make no apology. My point is that if the public is being asked to buy into major shifts in (effective and efficient!)  fundamental life cycle income supports, it should be based on more than “trust Treasury”.

A fifty year projection of trends is not just heroic, its nuts. Think back fifty years. Ignoring the EU, globalisation, China etc etc, consider just two technological changes that impacted trends since then: the pill and the computer. They fundamentally shifted birth and labour force participation rates and productivity. Policy based on projections of 1960s demographic, participation and productivity trends would have produced a (with hindsight) laughable prescription.

Even now, labour force participation rates for the 65+ age group show a steeply rising trend. We need a better understanding and more effective monitoring of factors that are driving the tax base, and changes in the demographic structure might well be one such. But it is manifestly not the only one, and almost certainly not the most important one.

My suggestion? Establish a very high evidential threshold for trashing key public welfare programmes. The more effective those programmes are judged to be, the higher the threshold needs to be set. Monitor and adjust in line with evidence, not theoretical or speculative projections. Consider all options, not just a cut in the programme. With NZS, we are talking about a 3-point-something of GDP increase in the cost of sustaining it. Cracking down on rampant and systemic tax avoidance, pre-funding, and ultimately a small increase in some tax rates seem to be much less socially disruptive options.

Right now, the case for fundamental changes to New Zealand Superannuation, like the war in Iraq, has not been made.

Peter Harris is an economist who specialises in public policy, the labour market, and primary industry issues. He has been Economist for the Council of Trade Unions (CTU) and economic adviser to Dr Michael Cullen. Peter was also chair of the Savings Product Working Group, whose report was the founding document for what evolved into the KiwiSaver scheme. Further biographical details can be found here.

Weekend reading, 30 July 2010

Friday, July 30th, 2010

A version of this list of recommendations also comes out earlier in the day as part of the weekly Policy Progress e-newsletter.

Chris Trotter - The “Why?” of Superannuation More Important That The “What?”
Chris Hipkins – Tax cuts or Super?
Claire Browning - Universal pension: universally fair?
Bernard Hickey - Why NZ still has time to debate its pensions crisis before the debt wave overwhelms us
In this week’s column on the  Retirement Income Policy and Intergenerational Equity conference, I called for progressives who disagreed with Peter Harris’s position that the current system is sustainable to make their views heard. As it turn out, Chris Trotter was already doing just that in his Press column (later reproduced on his blog).

Trotter claims that, “Only a fool would suggest that the vast expansion of our over-65 population will require no adjustments whatsoever to the current delivery mechanisms.” He then casts doubt on the reliability of Treasury’s fiscal  projections and says policymaking should be made on the basis of principles instead. Nevertheless, he concludes be saying that society should “do what it takes” to maintain an adequate Superannuation: “That may mean higher taxes. It may mean increased immigration. It may even mean adopting Dr Brash’s suggestion” (of allowing people to trade off the eligibility age against the rate of payment).

Very few progressives I know (of whatever stripe) agree with everything Chris Trotter says, but most of them accept that he does make quite insightful points from time to time. Is this one of those times? What do you think?

Actually, though, I found a statement he made in the depths of an (often intemperate) comment thread debate with Pundit’s Tim Watkin at least as interesting:

The work of people like Michael Littlewood and Susan St-John has clearly demonstrated that NZ’s super’ scheme is one of the fairest and most sustainable on Earth. The size of the dependent population remains about the same as it ever was in NZ – actual dependency has simply shifted from the very young to the very old. (In case all you pest-controllers hadn’t noticed there are far fewer children to take care of, house and educate than there were 65 years ago.)

(Trotter also responded to Watkin in a post on intergenerational issues this week.)

Chris Hipkins is part of the Labour caucus’s very strong ‘Class of ‘08′ and a frequent contributor to the Red Alert blog mainly produced by that group (and Trevor Mallard). His post picks up on my analysis and argues there is trade-off between Super sustainability and John Key’s tax cuts.

Claire Browning writes about green issues for the Pundit website. Her post is primarily reportage of the conference (much more comprehensive than mine — but best read from the bottom up, as it’s done as a series of updates). But she did set out some of her own conclusions:

I just don’t buy the argument that this is a Trojan horse, for antique treasures. This is not just an NZ thing; other OECD countries are recognising the problem and responding to it . . . Change to super policy will come, sooner or later, but it will come in the form of a little of everything we don’t much fancy, after working through some stuff that is hard: accurately sizing the problem, having some mutual respect and good will, a bit of a rise in the age of eligibility, maybe a bit of means testing, better use of capital assets in retirement, longer working lives.

Bernard Hickey is a financial journalist who runs the www.interest.co.nz website, “blogging on interest rates, economics and business in New Zealand”. He’s a pretty opinionated guy, and while I disagree with him at least as often as I agree with him, he’s usually got something interesting to say. Hickey has long been an advocate of the need to address this issue, but this post is primarily reportage of Gabs Makhlouf from the Treasury’s presentation at the conference. (He kindly links to my column, as well.)

What’s your view on this issue? What, if anything, needs to be done to secure the future of New Zealand superannuation? Will the policy need to change, and, if so, now? Leave a comment below!


Centre for American Progress – The Generation Gap on Government: Why and How the Millennial Generation Is the Most Pro-Government Generation and What This Means for Our Future
CAP is a US think-tank led by Bill Clinton’s former Chief of Staff John Podesta (Matthew Yglesias, oft-cited here, is also a Fellow of the Centre). I’ve been watching CAP’s Doing What Works project for a while and will write something up based on some of that work in the near future. In the meantime, however, I thought these survey results were worth sharing:

young Americans age 18 to 32 give the government more positive performance ratings and more strongly favor a significant role for government in addressing national challenges than does the public at large. (read more)

John Kay - Capitalism looks back to the future
Our friend John Kay reviews a new book Capitalism 4.0: The Birth of a New Economy by Anatole Kaletsky, editor-at-large of the Times, probably the least politically-aligned of the quality UK daily newspapers. It looks like an fascinating book about the past and future development of global capitalism, but I was also interested by Kay’s comments:

The collapse of Capitalism 2 [the Keynesian era] was not caused by Nixon, nor the collapse of Capitalism 3 [the deregulated era] by Mr Paulson: the collapse of these modes of capitalist behaviour was the product of their own internal contradictions, to borrow a phrase, and Capitalism 4 can only thrive if it resolves the contradictions of Capitalism 2 more effectively than did the politicians of the era of the Great Society and “you’ve never had it so good”.

Also:
Bryan Walker (Hot Topic/Sciblogs) – Technology advances, politicians hold back
LSE Centre for Economic Performance – Reducing Crime: More Police, More Prisons or More Pay?
Paul Hamer (Institute of Policy Studies) – The impact on te reo Māori of trans-Tasman migration

Commentary round-up

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

A regular feature spotlighting new writing (and audio) from top commentators Rod Oram, Colin James and Brian Easton.

Rod Oram focusses on international business relationships this week. His Nine to Noon spot looks at China, while his Star-Times column is Failure of nerve limits NZ to role of bit-player. It discusses the buy-up of Synlait and New Zealand Farming Systems Uruguay, and also points out that:

For each OECD country, [the New Zealand Institute] analysed exports and foreign direct investment as a percentage of GDP in 1990 and their gains by 2005 . . . It turns out we were the only OECD member to come up with a negative number. Our share of world trade and foreign direct investment had fallen . . . We were the only developed country that had become relatively less engaged with the world economy, and we will have fallen even further behind since. (read more)

(You can also read Big Cake’s take on this column here.)

Colin James writes about local government in Councils and the constitution for the Fairfax papers, while in Super fiscal crunch for the Otago Daily Times he discusses the Retirement Income Policy and Intergenerational Equity conference , which I also covered in this week’s column. He compares John Key to Doctor Pangloss, and argues that:

Since “66-at-65″ is a “third rail” issue (touch it and you’re dead), politicians of the next five or 10 years are unlikely to mitigate much beyond the now frozen Cullen fund and KiwiSaver. But at some point, if the Treasury is right, fiscal red ink will force adjustment. As with climate change, the later the mitigation the harsher the adaptation. (read more)

Brian Easton focusses on the global financial crisis. He writes about the role of China in a insightful paper that has some parallels with the analysis of Martin Wolf, while in his most-recently-available Listener column Second Great Contraction? he predicts the downturn will be lingering but offers “a ray of hope for New Zealand”:

China has not been as affected by the Global Financial Crisis and is expected to grow strongly. In turn, countries that are major exporters to China – among them Australia – are also expected to grow. So two of our biggest customers have a more optimistic outlook than the North Atlantic economies. With any luck (and a bit of attention), New Zealand will benefit from their good fortune. (read more)

If you’ve read other insightful pieces of commentary this week, particularly from a progressive perspective, let us know about it in the comments thread below.

New Zealand’s Super Future

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Last week I attended a Retirement Income Policy and Intergenerational Equity conference, which was set up by Victoria University’s Institute of Policy Studies and the Retirement Commissioner to contribute to the Commissioner’s three-yearly review of retirement income policies.

As I’ve previously stated, I think that it’s important for the progressive movement to actively engage with the debate around the costs of an ageing population and whether current arrangements are sustainable, so I felt it would be worth using this week’s column to report some of the key themes from this conference.

There were two prestigious overseas academics there as keynote speakers, Kent Weaver from the US and Peter Whiteford from Australia (and formerly of the OECD). It was striking how both of them spoke highly of New Zealand’s model of superannuation, which is unusual for being universal rather than means-tested and paid at a flat-rate rather than linked to earnings, as tends to be the case with the contributory (insurance-style) schemes that are the norm overseas.

Whiteford, who also impressed me at the Welfare Working Group Forum last month, was particularly good at illustrating the positive features of our system, which is both progressive (as shown in the slide reproduced below) and cost-effective.

In some ways, though, the ‘central’ presentation that the rest of the conference revolved around was that of Gabriel Makhlouf, Deputy Chief Executive of the Treasury, who set out in the greatest detail the problem of affordability. (The speech-notes from his presentation are available on the Treasury website.)

Makhlouf explained the Treasury’s long-term projections about population and costs, which were used in the Long-Term Fiscal Statement document that caused a stir when it was released late last year (see for instance Keith Ng’s take). Based on these projections, government spending on New Zealand Superannuation would go up from about 4.4% of GDP to around 8% by 2050 (or to put it another way, from 13% to 22% of core Crown spending).

This, along with other pressures, is set to significantly weaken the government’s finances. The good news here (according to Makhlouf) is that the story now isn’t nearly as dire as it was in the 2009 Fiscal Statement — it’s only as bad as it was in the previous Fiscal Statement in 2006. But that’s still pretty bad, as the following slide indicates:

Treasury’s analysis wasn’t unquestioningly accepted by other presenters. Ganesh Nana from BERL stressed that their model was (as Makhlouf had been careful to state) just a projection based on certain assumptions, and did not claim to be a forecast of what necessarily would happen.

One illustration that Nana gave of this was labour force participation of the 65+ age group. This has been rising rapidly over many years but Treasury assumes that it will decline again in the future. Nana showed (see slide below) how a continuation of current trends would have quite different implications (with flow-ons for economic growth and government revenue).

On the other hand, a Treasury person in the audience argued that their falling participation assumption was driven by ageing within the 65+ population (e.g. in the future a greater proportion of those in the 65+ group will be aged 85 and over).

Much of the rest of the conference was devoted to discussing various options (or combinations of options) to address the fiscal problem posed by the Treasury.

The option that seemed to crop up most frequently was raising the age of entitlement. This approach was set out in the greatest detail by Geoff Rashbrooke of the IPS (formerly a Ministry of Social Development official involved in the design of Kiwisaver, and also a member of the Windy City Strugglers blues band).

He argued that the real cost of superannuation to the working population could be maintained at current levels if entitlement was progressively lifted to age 75:

Rashbrooke also showed other cost profiles based on more modest entitlement age increases (67, 70).

Makhlouf had provided the rationale for an increase: “In 1938, for example, when NZ introduced a universal pension, a 65-year-old could expect to live to 78 on average.  By 1977, when today’s NZ Superannuation was essentially created (but with a take-up age of 60), a 65-year-old would live on average until 80. That life expectancy has now reached 85 and will rise to 89 for a 65-year-old in 2060.”

But there was also quite a bit of discussion at the conference about the fact that the 65+ age-group was a diverse population, and was perhaps becoming moreso. Many people reaching the age of eligibility are much healthier and able to keep working than their predecessors a generation or so ago, but others are not. And there may be a socioeconomic basis to this, with those in manual labouring jobs more likely to fall into the latter group.

A second solution was outlined by Susan St John of Auckland University’s Retirement Policy and Research Centre (and also well-known for her involvement with the Child Poverty Action Group). This was to restore some form of targeting to Superannuation payments, perhaps like the Surcharge abolished in 1998 (but better designed).

The third option mentioned by Makhlouf was reducing the rate of Superannuation over time (either by indexing it to inflation rather than wages or by dropping the wage ratio it was indexed to), but this received little serious discussion at the conference.

There was one other possibility that Makhlouf mentioned:

raising tax a little at first, but more assertively through time so that the tax-to-GDP ratio is eventually lifted by a little over 2 percentage points, would likely be enough to put a halt to projections for net debt to indefinitely track higher.

Such a move would amount to an across-the-board personal tax rise of 3.5 percentage points. Or, alternatively, the same amount of revenue could be raised with GST alone by lifting the GST rate by 4.2 percentage points.  But a very strong reason for not going down that route is that significantly higher taxes would further lower the economy’s speed limit.

It is worth stressing that this last claim is entirely ideological. Yet the possibility of addressing the affordability of superannuation partially or entirely through tax increases seems to have been written entirely out of the debate.

Nevertheless, this option remains available — the question is whether we as a community are willing to choose it. (Peter Harris made a similar point in a guest-post about this topic.) This seems to me to be a crucial insight about the whole debate, and one that was recognised on Nine to Noon’s politics slot yesterday where both Andrew Campbell (“from the left”) and Matthew Hooten (“from the right”) seemed to agree it was a question of which choice we wanted to make (rather than being a case of TINA – ‘there is no alternative’).

Another key insight is that the fiscal challenges of an ageing population are not limited to superannuation. The rising costs of health and age-related care were also raised intermittently during the conference. Peter Whiteford noted that, in both Australia and the US, healthcare is a much bigger issue than superannuation.  It also strikes me as one where less preparatory work has been done, at least in New Zealand: there is no Cullen Fund for health, and it does not appear that any equivalent to the options for managing superannuation costs discussed at this conference has been developed.

Your comments on any of the issues raised by an ageing population or on the proposed solutions are very welcome. In addition, I’ve published two guest-posts so far by economist Peter Harris, in defence of aspects of the current model, and I’d be interested in publishing further guest-posts, on either side of the argument. If you’ve got something to say (or know somebody else who does), then send an email and let us know.

“If I can’t retire, then where will I work?”

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

http://www.flickr.com/photos/myglesias/ / CC BY-SA 2.0Matthew Yglesias in the US had a good post recently on retirement ages. It’s worth reading in its (relatively brief) entirety, but I particularly found my head nodding at this bit:

The other issue is that as best I can tell from the labor market fate of people in the 50-65 age bracket, employers aren’t exactly chomping at the bit to hire older workers in any capacity . . . It seems to me that if your desire is to see more people in the 60-70 range working, that you have to show me you’re making some progress on creating meaningful labor market opportunities for older people. Just yanking the safety net out isn’t much of a solution.

As I’ve stated before, I think it’s important that the progressive movement debate the issues around savings levels, retirement incomes and the general costs of an ageing society in an informed and forthright manner.

I’ve published two guest-posts so far by economist Peter Harris, in defence of aspects of the current model. I’d be interested in publishing further guest-posts as well, on either side of the argument. If you’ve got something to say (or know somebody else who does), then send an email and let us know.

Why compulsory savings should not be on the agenda

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

“Compulsory Kiwisaver” is bubbling up on the agenda, the latest being a call for it at the recent stock exchange AGM. It is easy to see why the NZX wants it. Not only does it add liquidity to the capital market, but somebody else (the government) does all the hard work – and carries all the cost – in raising the capital, collecting it, distributing it to investment agencies and regulating providers. The quintessential “free lunch”!

There are four strong reasons to resist making Kiwisaver compulsory:

  • If the government is going to tell people how to allocate a part of their incomes, compulsion would almost certainly have to be backed by some form of compensation and protection, either through extended tax concessions and/or capital guarantees, and intrusive regulation and supervision of providers. This increases the chances that a larger proportion of Kiwisaver balances will simply be savings transfers (as savers chase the bigger subsidies and extended protection), not net new savings.
  • There is a risk that with compulsion, savings levels could actually be artificially capped. The government is telling me to save, therefore it is also by implication telling me how much to save. (It knows better than me).
  • With compulsion, rules are required for withdrawal (emigration, hardship, matrimonial property settlements, ill-health etc). These become incredibly complex and arbitrary, and tend to generate resentment, which works against promoting a savings culture.
  • Compulsion tends to be inequitable because it captures a portion of savings that some people make reluctantly (otherwise a voluntary system would be sufficient) and transfers it to preferred providers, who are typically quite well paid: it takes money off people who don’t want to use it that way to support the earnings of finance industry employees.

The net effect is a small – or potentially minimalist – increase in savings levels, won at considerable fiscal cost, excessive regulatory prescription on both saver and provider, and much more complexity.

Worse though, it sets up the pre-conditions for ending or scaling back the flat rate, universal New Zealand Superannuation. If people have to save, there is a perception that this is because NZS is on the way out. There can be no other legitimisation of compulsion. If people want to save (to augment NZS) that is entirely a private matter.  The perceptions and the politics work to divide opinion and diffuse commitment to defending NZS.

Remember that NZS is fundamentally equitable: it does not try to replicate in retirement the inequities that emerge during working life, it protects those (typically women) who live longest, it fences inflation risk off and it compensates (in part) for the fact that some retirees leave paid work with few financial assets. It is though, barely adequate as a retirement income. It is not generous.

Augmenting it is an entirely legitimate choice, but it is a private choice.

Last week, my son had a letter from his KiwiSaver provider reminding him that as a part time worker (he is a student) he had not qualified for his full tax credit, and that if he wanted it he would need to make an additional contribution before the end of the tax year. Sadly, his response was that he had better do that because the whole point of KiwiSaver was to replace the existing pension!

This compulsion thing is corrosive. NZS is worth saving.

_____________________

Peter Harris is an economist who specialises in public policy, the labour market, and primary industry issues. He has been Economist for the Council of Trade Unions (CTU) and economic adviser to Dr Michael Cullen. Peter was also chair of the Savings Product Working Group, whose report was the founding document for what evolved into the KiwiSaver scheme. Further biographical details can be found here.

Peter’s previous post for Policy Progress was Good policy process – the case of New Zealand Superannuation.

Good policy process – the case of New Zealand Superannuation

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010


There is a disturbing tendency to evaluate government policies and programmes in terms of how much government spending they involve, often in relation to a potentially volatile comparator like GDP. The Brash Taskforce was the worst offender on this front, but similar sentiments pervade recent reports from the Treasury, the IMF, the World Bank and the Business Roundtable. Policy prescriptions derived from this “standard” reflect poor policy process and are based on almost zero real analysis.

A standard victim of this shallow analysis is the state funded New Zealand Superannuation scheme.

“Paying a generous pension to everyone turning 65…. does not seem to fit very well with a serious focus on lifting material living standards…..Other Western countries have state pensions of one form or another. Those schemes are typically quite a bit less generous…than New Zealand’s…..the relatively favoured position of the elderly in New Zealand is fairly firmly established.” etc etc
(all of those quotes are from the Brash Taskforce, page 90).

Having asserted the “generosity” of the scheme, the prescription is obvious: scale it back to “reasonable” or some other acceptable standard.

But is the analysis sound? The key here is the concept of the “state”, in this case in relation to “state pensions”. Economics is simply about how a given set of resources are used, when there are options for using them in different ways. “The state” as an economic agent can tax and spend and clearly impact the form of resource use. But it can do much more: passing laws that dictate what individuals and firms have to do with a set portion of their incomes; putting obligations on other layers of statutory authority like local government and so on. It is the combination of these exercises of statutory authority that defines the role of the state.

Even then, that must be located in its proper context. For example, the level of state pensions needs to be related to average life expectancies: for different groups, and over time. A state pension is more or less generous depending on if it is taxed or not. It also matters what that pension has to cover: how many other services are provided free or at heavily subsidised rates to those above a certain age. While most pensions are indexed, it makes a great deal of difference to the value of those schemes whether they are indexed to price, or average wage movements.

A comprehensive survey of all of these dimensions of “state pensions” in OECD countries has been carried out by a Munich based research team on behalf of the OECD.

Admittedly this is a bit dated (2007), but the essence of the analytical approach remains valid. The report makes the very key observation that it is not sufficient to simply judge pensions policy in fiscal terms: social sustainability is also a crucial consideration: especially in relation to pensioner poverty.

Taking selective measures from that report almost defeats its very point: we really should look at measures comprehensively. However, constraints on length require me to do just that: this is more of a taste of what proper analysis should traverse.

The report shows that workers on average earnings in OECD countries can expect their post-tax pension to be about 70% of their earnings after tax. The countries with the lowest net replacement rates tend to be those which have just basic pension schemes. New Zealand’s is the fifth lowest in the OECD at 42%. That is a bit above Ireland’s (39%) and about the same as for the UK. The United States have slightly higher net replacement rates of around 52%.

A comparison with Australia is interesting. Because NZS is the only mandatory part of our state pension scheme, it delivers 100% of retirement income. In Australia, the mandatory employer contribution means that only 46% of their retirement incomes come from the comparable element. A consequence, however, is that even if our scheme is far less generous, it is also more equitable.

In Australia, a person on half of the average wage will get 84% of that (net) in retirement, not much above 81% for the New Zealand equivalent. A person on the average wage would get 56% in Australia, 42% here. On twice the average wage the Aussie gets a 41% replacement rate through the mandatory state pension system: compared to23% here.

Michael Cullen used to say that basic income security in retirement was the least that the citizens should expect from their governments in a developed economy: but it was also the most they should expect. The state should not aim to replicate in retirement incomes earned during working life (for both equity and efficiency reasons).

Pension wealth – the present value of the future stream of pension payments – is the most comprehensive indicator of pension promises. It takes into account the level at which pensions are paid, the age at which people become eligible to receive a pension, people’s life expectancy and how pensions are adjusted after retirement to reflect growth in wages or prices.”

Pension wealth in New Zealand is 6.1 years for men and 7.1 years for women, compared to 8.1 and 9.4 years for the respective OECD averages. In Australia they are 7.3 and 8.4.

“Generous?” On what measure?!

By any standard, New Zealand Superannuation is affordable and sustainable. A programme that costs at peak no more than 10% of GDP is both. The legitimate question is whether that is the priority that the citizens want. Debate that by all means, and debate how it is to be funded, but please, as a matter of analytical rigour, do not prejudice the path of that debate by making the assertion that our scheme is “generous”.

Peter Harris is an economist who specialises in public policy, the labour market, and primary industry issues. He has been Economist for the Council of Trade Unions (CTU) and economic adviser to Dr Michael Cullen. Peter was also chair of the Savings Product Working Group, whose report was the founding document for what evolved into the KiwiSaver scheme. Further biographical details can be found here.