Public back compulsory savings policy idea
Sunday, 24 June 2012
For Immediate Use
Media
release
Public back compulsory savings
policy idea
New
Zealanders are firmly in favour of making contributions to
employees’ personal retirement savings accounts
compulsory.
The Financial Services Council (FSC) has not taken a position on whether savings contributions by employees and employers should be voluntary or compulsory. It says this is a decision for the public and politicians to make. It raises the idea for public debate in a major report released on Sunday (June 17).
A May 18 to June 8 Horizon Research poll of 3,177 adult New Zealanders commissioned by the FSC finds:
• 74% think New Zealand
should, over time, introduce a retirement savings scheme in
which contributions by both employees and employers are
compulsory. Only 16% oppose
•
72% support the FSC suggestion of
increasing savings contributions to reach 10% a year (5%
from employees, 5% from employers).
In terms of how
compulsory contributions might be phased in
• 52% support the idea of contributions being made of 0.5% each year by the employee and employer over 10 years, until the total each year reaches 10% of an employees’ income.
Best option for New Zealand:
Asked if making KiwiSaver compulsory or voluntary is the best option for New Zealand, regardless of their personal point of view
• 63.7% favour compulsion
• 26.7% favour voluntary, while 9.6%
don’t know.
Compulsory versus voluntary: decision for public, politicians:
The FSC
suggests the question of whether or not savings
contributions by employees and employers should be voluntary
or compulsory be considered by a new all-party Parliamentary
Select Committee on Retirement Income Security. It suggests
such a committee oversee the development and passage of new
retirement income policy. The FSC suggests the committee
gather reports from officials and others, issue a discussion
document, consult with the public, and come up with a new
long-term retirement income bill by the end of 2013.
If
that bill is passed with less than 75% support from MPs it
suggests the law be the subject of a referendum in 2014.
Party voter support:
FSC Chief
Executive Peter Neilson says the research shows overwhelming
public support to not only keep NZ Super, but to start using
savings to ensure any KiwiSaver Plus participant, and
particularly those aged under 40, can live comfortably in
retirement. For those under 40 the FSC proposes a scheme
which will more than double the current income provided by
NZ Super. At the same time the FSC wants the NZ Super
entitlements to remain the same for all those close to
retirement or receiving it now.
Mr Neilson says the
latest survey on retirement policy option suggestions shows
most of the parties in Parliament would have their voters’
support if they move to consider new retirement savings
options.
Some 73% of people who voted National at the
2011 general election think making KiwiSaver compulsory
would be in New Zealand’s best interests. Support among
other parties’ voters was: 66.3% Labour, 70.1% Green, 74%
NZ First, 60.1% Maori Party and 79.5% Mana.
The FSC says it has polled support for other KiwiSaver Plus policy options and plans to release those results shortly.
The FSC report on future retirement options is available at www.fsc.org.nz
The survey
was conducted by Horizon Research for the FSC. 3,177
respondents were 18+. Results were weighted match population
averages for age, gender, ethnicity, employment, education
level and, to ensure a sample aligned with 2011 voter
support, party vote in 2011. The maximum margin of error at
a 95% confidence level is ±1.7% overall. Interviewing was
undertaken between May 18 and June 8, 2012.
This
issue is being discussed at:
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/FinancialServicesCouncilfsc
Twitter - https://twitter.com/#!/FSCNZ
Ends
Iain
Morrison