Yet more proof that people are not machines: the number 174. That's the number of weird ways that our brains can distract us from making good decisions. These biases have all sorts of names from "actor-observer" to "zero-sum" - and those are just the ones researchers have found so far.
I've written about people's biases before (especially anchoring), but I had never realised how many there are: 174! So we are wonderfully flawed, yet at the same time we're clever enough to study just how irrational we are.
I'm sure some of these come into play in KiwiSaver when it comes to getting the full government whack every year. The government puts in money if we do, but for some reason tens of thousands of us don't put in enough to get our full due.
Many more of us should be getting the $521 each year that we're entitled to if we put in $1,043 ourselves. Over the next year that works out to putting in a bit more than $20 a week in order to get $10 on top of that.
Those of us who do this regularly - such as anyone earning at least $34,762 a year and putting in the minimum 3% - are already getting the government money. Nothing more to do. But if we're on a contributions holiday, or if we're in part-time work or self-employed, we could miss out.