New Zealanders have been scared into saving for their retirement, says Finance Minister Bill English, but retirees here will be better off than their counterparts in Europe, Britain and the United States.
"There is going to be an awful lot of uncertainty about retirement savings around the world. Hopefully we will be an island of calm in that sea of confusion."
Mr English said that across the developed world, the end of debt-funded retirement was coming - "the end of the free lunch just at the time when a lot of people were looking at cashing up that free lunch".
Tensions would rise in various societies where high expectation had been built on economic growth rates and asset growth rates which have been significantly debt-funded, expectations which now would certainly not be met.
Mr English was speaking in Wellington at the launch yesterday of a Westpac-Massey University-Workplace Savings NZ University survey on how much New Zealand retirees spend, in order to set guidelines for how much is needed for a "modest" or "comfortable" lifestyle in retirement.