Pre-Funding New Zealand Superannuation: Budget Implications
Executive Summary
1. This paper is one in a suite of papers on pre-funding New Zealand Superannuation (NZS). Decisions on the funding
of NZS need to be made in the context of the Government’s overall fiscal objectives and capital spending plans.
2. In the 2000 Budget Policy Statement and in more detail in the 2000 Fiscal Strategy Report, we set out the key
elements of our overall fiscal policy. These included assumptions about the extra amounts that would be set aside for
pre-funding New Zealand Superannuation, as well as provisions for future spending decisions and capital investment
decisions. A balance was struck to ensure that net debt is brought to below 20% of GDP in the short-term while
increasing operating and capital spending. This was illustrated in the 2000 Fiscal Strategy Report.
3. The analysis for the 2000 Budget was based on a “technical assumption” that the contributions retained in the
Fund would be $600m, $1,200m and $1,800m in the first three years, giving a transition to the full rate of contribution
by the 2004 Budget. These amounts will need to be reassessed during the forthcoming 2001 Budget decision-making process.
However, I do not anticipate that the contributions in those years would be any less than these amounts because, at
these levels, our debt objectives are still forecast to be met comfortably.
4. Future Budgets will also need to weigh our obligation to provide for future New Zealand Superannuation along
with other priorities for current and capital spending. Making these decisions in the lead up to the Budget Policy
Statement will ensure that an ordered approach is taken to the relative fiscal priorities of debt repayment, spending
and NZS funding objectives. This process will facilitate an on-going review of relative priorities that can be
integrated into our longer-term goals for current and capital spending.
5. Any adjustments to policy should be made with reference to the long term fiscal objectives. In the exceptional
event of a departure from the required level of contribution to pre-funding, the Government would be required to explain
the reasons for the departure and its implications for future contribution levels.
Fiscal Policy Approach
6. Our policy programme will only be sustainable if it is grounded in sound fiscal policy. In the Budget Policy
Statement and the Fiscal Strategy Report we set out the key elements of our fiscal policy approach. These elements
include:
As a general rule, keeping revenues and expenses in at least broad balance on average (excluding the allowance for
pre-funding future NZS costs).
Reducing gross Crown debt to below 30% of GDP and net Crown debt to below 20% of GDP – levels that are relatively low
in historical and international terms.
Keeping expenses at around current levels of about 35% of GDP.
7. Sound fiscal policy should also take a longer view and recognise the emergence of spending pressures before they
impact. New Zealand’s population is ageing. By setting aside some resources toward future retirement income costs now we
will be able to smooth out the cost over time. One of the key objectives of pre-funding NZS is to ensure that future
costs of NZS entitlements are linked to how they are to be financed. Governments need to be able to demonstrate how the
NZS entitlements they support can be afforded in the context of overall fiscal objectives.
8. The Government’s formal long-term fiscal objectives reflect our views about the appropriate size and role of
government and about sound, forward-looking fiscal policy.
Balancing Pre-funding and Other Fiscal Objectives: In Principle
9. It is important that we have the opportunity to weigh the relative fiscal priorities from different areas of
government activity and translate these into Budget decisions that reflect our overall priorities and are consistent
with our long-term fiscal objectives. As a new fiscal objective, making contributions to pre-funding must be weighed
against our existing fiscal objectives.
10. Contributions to pre-funding would be capital contributions and therefore would not directly impact on the
operating balance, as they would not be current expenses. However, the contributions would affect the level of
indebtedness in the rest of the Crown. Achievement of the debt objectives, as a share of GDP is the overarching fiscal
constraint for assessing the Government’s overall funding requirements because it ensures that both expense and capital
investment requirements are taken into account.
11. The Government’s debt objectives are defined as a percentage of GDP in order to retain relativity to the size of
the economy and, hence, to the tax base. In any particular year, nominal debt may increase, yet the Government’s percent
of GDP debt objectives could still be met. The Government has set long-term objectives for gross and net debt at 30% and
20% of GDP respectively.
12. For example, all things being equal, any decision to increase the capital provisions would increase debt. The
decision would therefore need to be considered in relation to the Crown's capacity to fund spending and NZS pre-funding
objectives, while still being capable of meeting its debt objectives.
Balancing Pre-funding and Other Fiscal Objectives: in Practice
13. The interrelationships between the Government’s fiscal objectives were considered in the 2000 Fiscal Strategy
Report and Budget Economic and Fiscal Update (the 2000 Budget). The 2000 Budget adopted technical assumptions on
transitional contributions to the Fund of $600 million in 2001/02, $1,200 million in 2002/03 and $1,800 million in
2003/04 before the full contribution rate is paid in 2004/05. These remain our working assumptions, however they will
need to be reviewed carefully as part of the 2001 Budget process. I do not anticipate that the contributions in those
years would be any less than these amounts because, at these levels, our debt objectives are still forecast to be met
comfortably.
14. In the short term the Government has committed to a $5.9 billion fiscal provision, and is finalising its capital
provision on the basis of expected capital project requirements. Over this period, I believe we have struck a balance
that sees us making good progress on debt objectives, increasing capital and current spending and building up the
contribution rate. The 2000 Fiscal Strategy Report and Budget Economic and Fiscal Update demonstrates that the
pre-funding proposal is fiscally affordable while fully meeting all our other fiscal objectives (see technical annex)
and taking into account the need to finalise the capital provision.
15. Furthermore, I am suggesting a process that both in the short term and medium term would allow us to check our
progress towards all our fiscal objectives and, if necessary, make adjustments, including on changing the contribution
rate in the short term. However, given our debt objectives are forecast to be comfortably met, I believe it is unlikely
we would need to adjust the transitional funding arrangements.
Budget Process and the Proposed Scheme
16. Decisions on the Government’s overall budget strategy are usually made in October/November preceding the Budget,
and these decisions form the basis of the Budget Policy Statement. It is at this point in the Budget cycle that we would
make overall decisions about the relative fiscal priorities of debt repayment, current and capital spending and Fund
objectives.
17. The budget strategy decision-making process starts with the preparation of revised macroeconomic and fiscal
forecasts. These fiscal forecasts would incorporate some view on resources for the next Budget, and hence indicate the
amount of flexibility the government has in considering its spending intentions.
18. Because budget strategy decisions are taken in the context of our long-term fiscal objectives, I would see us
also making use of revised ten-year fiscal projections (Progress Outlooks). In this way we can monitor developments and
make adjustments around a rolling ten-year fiscal horizon to ensure that our long-term fiscal objectives are met.
19. Adjustments to policy settings would be made if the longer-term fiscal projections suggested a sustained
departure from our long-term fiscal objectives. Given expected revenues, we would effectively be trading off between
spending levels, contributions to the Fund and debt repayment. It is at this stage of the process that we would review
our general approach to the fiscal and capital allowances.
20. We would not, however, change policy settings or long-term fiscal objectives in response to a short-term fiscal
shock. In that case we would generally maintain both projected spending levels and the existing contribution rate, and
use debt repayment as a buffer. This approach provides some flexibility to adjust to changes in both the economic
environment and to our priorities. At the same time it builds credibility in the pre-funding approach as decisions are
made in the context of the Government’s overall fiscal objectives and departures from the contribution rate would need
to be explained.
Budget Documents
21. The Budget Policy Statement would specify the Government’s long-term objectives for fiscal policy, including the
desired contribution rate for pre-funding of New Zealand Superannuation. If there was to be any departure from the
long-term contribution policy, this would be agreed as part of the budget strategy discussions, and the amount and
reason behind any departure from the long-term policy would need to be explained.
22. The Budget Economic and Fiscal Update prepared by Treasury would be required to include a statement of the
required level of contribution to the Fund. In the Budget, the amount to be provided to the Fund would be appropriated,
as a capital contribution. Payments to the Fund would be disclosed in the Statement of Cashflows and a separate line
included in the Statement of Financial Position (balance sheet) to indicate growth in Fund assets.
23. It is unlikely that the intended contribution rate would change between publication of the Budget Policy
Statement and the Fiscal Strategy Report. In the case of an unexpected movement in the amount of the contribution, the
Government would maintain its existing policy settings with regard to the rate, and compensate for the change in the
forecast fiscal position by altering debt repayment.
24. Should the Government decide not to contribute at the “required” level reported in the Budget Economic and
Fiscal Update, the Government would be required to include in the Fiscal Strategy Report an explanation for the
departure, an assessment of its implications for future required contribution levels, and (if less than the required
level) the action that the Government plans to take to return to the path of required rates of contribution expected for
the future as a result of this departure. This process of specifying an objective, complying with it in the normal
course of events, and disclosing and justifying departures is consistent with the approach taken to other fiscal
objectives in the Fiscal Responsibility Act 1994.
Comment
25. The implications of pre-funding for legislation, the Treaty of Waitangi, the Human Rights Act and publicity are
addressed in the associated Cabinet paper on funding arrangements, as is a statement of the consultation undertaken in
developing this policy. A Regulatory Impact Statement is also attached to that paper.
Recommendations
I recommend that the Cabinet Policy Committee:
a agree that decisions on pre-funding be made in the context of the Government’s broader fiscal objectives;
b agree that beyond the transitional funding period, the Government set its fiscal and capital objectives in light
of the pre-funding contribution rate and debt objectives; and
c agree that the Government use the revised ten year fiscal projections to monitor developments and make
adjustments around a rolling ten-year fiscal horizon to ensure long term fiscal objectives are being met.
Hon Dr Michael Cullen
Minister of Finance
TECHNICAL ANNEX: DEBT OBJECTIVES, FISCAL AND CAPITAL ALLOWANCES
The transition period
At the start of the transition period, net and gross debt-to-GDP are above the Government’s long-term objectives and the
operating position is in broad structural (cyclically-adjusted) balance. In order to meet the debt objectives and make
contributions to the Fund, the Government needs to increase the level of the structural surplus. In order to make
progress toward the fiscal objectives, the Government has set:
A fiscal provision of $5.9 billion over 1999/2000 to 2002/03. The fiscal forecasts in the Budget Economic and Fiscal
Update include a technical assumption for a provision of $800 million in 2003/04.
Capital provisions (including student loans) of around $800 million each year from 2000/01 to 2002/03. This provision
will be reviewed once the Government has considered its capital spending priorities in more detail, and the extent to
which capital can be withdrawn from State-Owned Enterprises becomes clearer.
During the transition period the Government builds up the contributions to the Fund, with assumed contributions of $600
million in 2001/02, $1.2 billion in 2002/03, and $1.8 billion in 2003/04. Any increases in these capital contributions
(all other things being equal) do not directly impact on the operating balance, though they impact on both Gross and Net
debt.
Beyond the transition period
The 10-year fiscal projections in the Fiscal Strategy Report illustrate how the fiscal constraints interact with the
Fund beyond the transition period. (The projections assume that the rate of return on Fund assets is equivalent to the
long-term Government stock rate).
Until 2003/04, the projections are the fiscal forecasts in the Budget Economic and Fiscal Update. They include the
fiscal provision of $5.9 billion over 1999/2000 to 2002/03, a technical assumption of $800 million in 2003/04 and
capital provisions (excluding student loans) of around $400 million each year from 2000/01 to 2002/03.
Beyond 2003/04, the projections include a “fiscal allowance” of $1.2 billion a year. The fiscal allowance indicates the
fiscal flexibility that the Government has for expense and revenue initiatives, accelerating contributions to the Fund,
and responding to developments in the economic and fiscal position that differ from the projections. The fiscal
allowance would be reviewed as part of the budget strategy process, taking into account likely progress toward agreed
long-term fiscal objectives (e.g., debt).
Beyond 2003/04 the projections include a capital allowance of $400 million per year to cover increased Government
investment in departments (over and above depreciation funding for asset purchases), and State-Owned Enterprises and
Crown Entities. It is assumed that the net surplus of State-Owned Enterprises and Crown Entities is reinvested back into
the Crown’s SOE/CE asset. This is assumed to average around $900 million over the projection period. As part of the
annual budget strategy process, the capital allowance would be reviewed in the context of longer-term capital spending
demands.
If the projections prove accurate, operating surpluses will build to just over 3.5% of GDP by 2009/10.