Superannuitants with 10 years' residency get the same taxable pension. NZ Super has been a very equalising factor, because it is paid to the individual and gives recognition to the value of all work on which society depends, including the unpaid caregiving largely done by women.
While our universal superannuation policy appears well supported, there are signs of tension. Let's take a simple comparison between the state support for a couple on NZ Super, and a Generation X couple who can't get work, perhaps due to sickness or a natural disaster, and need a welfare benefit.
Back in 1998, the net weekly NZ Super for a couple was $324, and a couple on a benefit got $246. Today, a couple on NZ Super gets $565, while a couple on a benefit gets only $348, leaving them trailing by $217 a week. High income over-65-year-olds get less after tax, but the value of NZ Super for those who may still be in well-paid, full-time work is actually more than the net unemployment benefit.
How long can growing differences like these be sustained? How long will tax-free capital gains enjoyed by the old and their descendants be tolerated by those of the young who don't inherit and pay ever more for housing?
No one pretends the issues are easy, but some system could (and should) be found to shift resources from wealthy baby-boomers to provide more for others.
Raising the qualifying age for NZ Super is seen by some as a silver bullet. But even if it was done as aggressively as in the 1990s when it rose from 60 to 65 years with little warning and over the space of only a decade, there would be other costs. Of real concern are those who can't support themselves and yet are expected to be 'work ready' in a demeaning and inadequate welfare system.
But we are not raising the age at all, or even talking about it, so any future increase may be a very long way down the track, and any savings a long way off.
So what about reducing the level of NZ Super? Some would link it only to prices. However the lesson from welfare benefits is that a wage link is critical if living standards are not to fall to disastrously low levels over time. There is no evidence that NZ Super at current rates provides a lavish lifestyle to those without other resources - far from it. We don't want to reinvent poverty for the old.
There is only one other major lever to reduce costs, and that is the no-go issue of means testing. New Zealand has had some nasty experiences, such as the 1991 Budget attempt to make NZ Super just a welfare benefit, and very few New Zealanders would like the kind of means test applied in Australia.
When Prime Minister Rob Muldoon introduced National Superannuation in 1977, many said it was too expensive. But the top earners had a very high tax rate and might have retained only a third of the payment after tax. Then, a surcharge was imposed from 1985 for 13 years. The irony is that today, the top earners, often still working full-time, retain 67 per cent of NZ Super after tax, or even more if they have a clever financial adviser.
Yes, we should be raising the age, and yes, we need to redesign the welfare system, but we can also take the pressure off Generation X by designing the tax system to claw back NZ Super from the top 10 per cent of superannuitants without too much pain for them or anyone else. At the very least, we should be talking about it.
Associate Professor Susan St John is co-director of the University of Auckland Business School's Retirement Policy and Research Centre.
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