Prime Minister John Key acknowledged there is currently a debate going on about the retirement age, but stuck to his promise it would not be raised on his watch.
This comes after the Retirement Commission yesterday recommended the age should be raised by two months a year from 2020 until it reached 67 in 2033.
Key said raising the superannuation age could be an issue looked at by future Parliaments, but continued to rule out raising it while he was Prime Minister.
Answering comments that Business NZ head Phil O’Reilly had said there needed to be a conversation about the retirement age, Key said, “Well there is a conversation going on, that’s why the Retirement Commission has released their report.
“New Zealanders are free to debate it, any political party is free to have their view on it. My view is that at this point it doesn’t need to change,” Key said.
Labour Party leader Phil Goff has also supported not raising the retirement age.
Meanwhile, Business Roundtable Executive Director Roger Kerr commended the retirement commissioner on her comments:
Here is the release from Kerr:
“Retirement Commissioner Diana Crossan deserves credit for her a-political advice that New Zealand needs to face up to the issue of raising the age of eligibility for New Zealand Superannuation”, Roger Kerr, executive director of the New Zealand Business Roundtable, said today.
As the 2025 Taskforce also said in its report last month, changes to NZS are “vital and are already well overdue.” New Zealand simply cannot hope to achieve the growth rates needed to catch up to Australian income levels with the present share of government spending in the economy, let alone higher ratios with the increased spending on superannuation and health associated with an aging population.
The Taskforce pointed out that the benefits of increasing the superannuation age beyond 65, in line with moves in Australia and other countries, included:
lower spending on superannuation itself
higher GDP per capita and tax revenue from increased participation of older people in the labour force, and lower tax rates when this effect is combined with lower spending on superannuation, and
modestly reduced health spending (it is well-established that if people remain active longer they also tend to keep in better health).
At the same time it has to be recognised that the government has made a commitment not to raise the eligibility age, and such commitments should not be lightly breached.
A way forward, however, could be similar to the resolution of the dilemma the Howard government in Australia faced over GST.
Former prime minister John Howard had made a commitment not to introduce a GST, but came to realise that was a mistake.
He had the courage to put the issue to voters in a subsequent election and was successful in securing a mandate to implement a GST.
“There seems no good reason to think New Zealanders are not realistic enough to support a planned and gradual increase in the eligibility age if the issue is put to them clearly and openly”, Mr Kerr said.
“An even better way forward might be a multi-party agreement on such a course of action.
“The worst outcome would be to keep deferring an inevitable decision until a future government has to take precipitate action against the background of a fiscal and economic crisis.”
(Updates with Kerr comments.)
7 Comments
I reckon , it is hard to LABOUR the point
Butt the KEY to the economy
Is to discuss EVERY ISSUE , EVERY ISSUE ( my sop to the sap , at unFairfax )
and not to get Don Knotty , about RE-Tyrement !
It's the Formula 1 to our NZ FUTURE
.......... To BAIT , and de-BATE , and KNOTT emulate them in Wellywood ,
who can only Master Bate .............. and feather their cushy joint !
We are GOOFY , to live beyond our means ........... and Bank Krupp ,
a future generation , of their right ........... to be FREE ,
from the LARGESSE , of their Anne Sisters !
What right do we have to saddle the youngsters of today , with an onerous burden in the future , so that we can retire in the style of our choosing !
Key and Goff are utterly selfish . Both are placing personal political gain ahead of making unpopular , but good policy decisions . The current National and Labour partys ought to hang their heads in shame .
Having shut down the debate on retirement once again , John Key's credibility as a sensible leader is in tatters . He's foolishly sleep-walking towards a victory in 2011 ............. That is all he cares about .
Let's see if the electorate wake him up , I reckon Key's gonna get a shock ............ NZ , ... Nation of Zombies , or not ?
Agreed.
I sure I have previously pointed out that John Key is not a leader (our parliament has a surfeit of managers but is bereft of leaders).
John Key's refusal to confront critical issues and his hiding behind 'promises' confirms that he is not capable of leading at a national level.
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