Partial savings withdrawal for purchase of a first home. Some own and
employer KiwiSaver savings can be withdrawn in order to purchase a first home.
The government contribution (the kick-start payment and the member tax
credit) cannot be withdrawn.
• First home deposit subsidy. After three years of contributing to KiwiSaver, con-
tributors may be entitled to a first home deposit subsidy. The subsidy, admin-
istered by Housing New Zealand, is paid on the day the purchase is settled.
The subsidy is $NZ 1,000 for each year of contributions, up to a maximum of
$NZ 5,000 for five years. A couple buying a house together and both qualifying
could receive a combined subsidy of up to $NZ 10,000.
Tax Treatment
Employer contributions to any retirement saving scheme in New Zealand are deduct-
ible by the employer for tax purposes but are subject to the Employer Superannuation
Contribution Tax. This tax, which has been in place in one form or another since 1990,
taxes employer contributions to voluntary retirement schemes on the grounds that these
schemes are an additional form of remuneration. Initially, employer contributions to
KiwiSaver were given an exemption from the Employer Superannuation Contribution
Tax on the compulsory employer contribution of 2 percent of earnings, but this exemp-
tion was withdrawn April 1, 2012. No concessional tax treatment of the earnings on
investment is provided for any retirement scheme, including KiwiSaver. All retirement
schemes are taxed on a proxy basis, as if the payments were the income of the member.
KiwiSaver Providers
Private financial services companies, known as KiwiSaver providers, manage the schemes.
Inland Revenue assigns people who do not choose their own scheme and whose employer
does not have a scheme to one of the six government-appointed default providers. Alloca-
tion to a provider is done one by one on a serial basis.
110
MATCHING CONTRIBUTIONS FOR PENSIONS: A REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE
The companies appointed as default providers were chosen following a competitive
tender and a detailed evaluation process. They were selected based on a number of criteria,
including security and organizational credibility, organizational capability, scheme struc-
ture, administrative capability, fee levels, and investment capacity/capability.
Seven companies applied to be default providers. Although a regulation could have
been made under the KiwiSaver Act capping the number of providers, none is apparent,
and it is unclear on what basis the limit was set at six.
The default providers’ contract with the government requires them to meet addi-
tional reporting requirements and limits the fees they can charge. There is also additional
monitoring of their default funds (they may also offer other KiwiSaver funds).
6
Default
funds are required to be invested conservatively, with the percentage of growth assets to be
kept to 15–25 percent of total assets.
The mandate of the existing default providers is to be reviewed in 2014. An initial
review, which will commence in late 2012, will set out to answer the following broad
questions:
• How have existing default arrangements performed from operational, adminis-
trative, regulatory, and policy effectiveness perspectives?
• What should be the objectives for the default provider arrangements, and what
are the best institutional arrangements and investment settings for delivering
these objectives?
• What is the optimal process for managing any transitions from existing
arrangements?
Providers other than the default providers are also required to enter into agreements
with the government, setting out their duties and responsibilities, but no limit exists on
the number of providers (and although some market observers have suggested amalgama-
tion should be occurring, there is little sign of that). At last count, there were 52 registered
providers, including the 6 default providers. These providers may offer more than one
investment choice. There is no constraint on the nature of investment choice and assets,
but the potential member must receive an investment statement describing the nature of
the investment and its risks.
Other
Initially, each member received a fee subsidy of $NZ 40 a year, and employers had their
compulsory contribution subsidized through an employer tax credit of up to $NZ 20 a
week per member. Both these subsidies were discontinued on April 1, 2009.
Contributors can change their KiwiSaver scheme at any time, but they can belong
to only one KiwiSaver scheme at a time. To change their scheme, contributors must apply
directly to the provider of the scheme they want to join. The new provider will arrange
for savings to be transferred from the old scheme to the new one. With the exception of
default funds, the old scheme may charge a transfer fee.
All KiwiSaver schemes are regulated by the Financial Markets Authority, in a similar
way as other registered retirement schemes. One difference is that all KiwiSaver schemes
are required to pay fees that are “not unreasonable.” The process, set out in the KiwiSaver
regulations, requires the Financial Markets Authority to compare fees with those of other
5. NEW ZEALAND’S EXPERIENCE WITH THE KIWISAVER SCHEME
111
comparable schemes (which need not be KiwiSaver schemes). The regulations cite a num-
ber of criteria for the comparison, including the structure of the scheme, the number of
members, and the asset base of the scheme. The fact that the process is based on compari-
son rather than absolute amounts may not encourage low fees, particularly as information
on fees is difficult to standardize. However, providers claim that they cannot afford, under
current fees, to remunerate financial advisers to give members individual advice. In the
May 2012 budget, the government directed more work on disclosure of fees and invest-
ment returns in a standardized fashion.
OUTCOMES
The government set aside funding for a comprehensive evaluation program as an integral
part of setting up KiwiSaver. Initial reports were biannual; recently they have been con-
ducted annually.
7
This section summarizes the most recent evaluation report, for the year
ending June 30, 2011, and provides some supplementary material on asset allocation.
Enrollment Patterns
People can become KiwiSaver members in three ways:
• Automatic enrollment occurs when employees are automatically enrolled upon
employment and they do not opt out. Enrollees can specify a provider or accept
the provider sponsored by their employer (if there is one). If they do neither, they
will be assigned to a default fund.
• Opt-in through an employer occurs when an employee chooses to join the
KiwiSaver scheme sponsored by the employer.
• Opt-in through a provider occurs when people enroll directly through a provider.
Table 5.1 shows the ways in which KiwiSavers have enrolled in the program since its
inception.
Opt-in through a provider has been a significant part of enrollment from the outset;
after netting opt-outs from automatic enrollments, it has become the predominant means
of enrollment. Opt-ins include many people under age 18, as described below, and can
reasonably be attributed to the desire to obtain the kick-start subsidy.
Opt-ins through employers were initially high, in large part thanks to the kick-start
subsidy and member tax credit. Some employees worked for employers that did not offer
a retirement scheme and who would have not required a great deal of motivation to join.
Figure 5.2 shows how opt-in through providers and employers has outstripped
automatic enrollment on a cumulative monthly basis. Actual monthly enrollments were
broadly stable, at about 25,000 a month from August 2008 through June 2011. Sub-
sequently, enrollments fell to about 10,000 a month, possibly because of a more diffi-
cult labor market, tougher economic times, the reduction in member tax credit, or some
degree of satiation.
Forty-four percent of the eligible population is enrolled in KiwiSaver. Enrollment is
not evenly distributed by age (figures 5.3 and 5.4). People age 25–44 have been the most
consistent joiners. Unsurprisingly, people closer to retirement opted in to a greater degree
at the beginning, given the five-year minimum membership before being able to withdraw
112
MATCHING CONTRIBUTIONS FOR PENSIONS: A REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE
savings and perhaps a realization of inadequacy of retirement provision. Enrollment
among people under age 18 was slow at the beginning but may have been influenced sub-
sequently by greater awareness of the significant kick-start payment on enrollment. The
distribution by sex has been 52 percent women more or less constantly over the period.
TABLE 5.1 Total cumulative enrollment in KiwiSaver, 2008–11
Enrollment
status
2008 2009 2010 2011
Automatic enrollment
273,279
426,629
541,769
646,725
Opt-in through employer
169,410
195,940
211,883
232,131
Opt-in through provider
273,948
477,971
706,290
877,076
% increase over previous year
n.a.
54
33
20
Total net enrollment
716,637
1,100,540
1,459,942
1,755,932
Opt-out
137,762 221,045 245,898 249,549
Closed 1,044
8,240
13,656
25,559
% increase over previous year
n.a.
55
29
18
Total gross enrollment
855,443 1,329,825 1,719,496 2,031,040
Eligible population (age 0–65)
3,746,700
3,787,100
3,814,700
3,823,600
SOURCE: Inland Revenue 2011.
NOTE: Figures are as of June 30. n.a. = not applicable.
FIGURE 5.2 Total and monthly enrollments in KiwiSaver, 2007–11
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4
1.6
1.8
2.0
Aug. 2007
Oct. 2007
Dec. 2007
Feb. 2008
Apr. 2008
June 2008
Aug. 2008
Oct. 2008
Dec. 2008
Feb. 2009
Apr. 2009
June 2009
Aug. 2009
Oct. 2009
Dec. 2009
Feb. 2010
Apr. 2010
June 2010
Aug. 2010
Oct. 2010
Dec. 2010
Feb. 2011
Apr. 2011
June 2011
monthly enrollment (thousands)
total enrollment (millions)
total net opt-ins
total net automatic enrollees
monthly enrollment
SOURCE: Inland Revenue 2011.
NOTE: Enrollments for July and August 2007 were combined.
5. NEW ZEALAND’S EXPERIENCE WITH THE KIWISAVER SCHEME
113
People under age 18 have relatively low rates of enrollment; people entering the
workforce (where they are exposed to automatic enrollment) have relatively high rates of
enrollment. There is also a slight overrepresentation at older ages, where consciousness of
impending retirement is higher (the effect of a shorter time frame in which to obtain the
subsidy may have an influence as well).
FIGURE 5.3 Age at which member enrolled in KiwiSaver, 2007–11
0
20
40
60
80
100
July–Aug. 2007
Sep–Oct. 2007
Nov–Dec. 2007
Jan–Feb. 2008
Mar–Apr. 2008
May–June 2008
July–Aug. 2008
Sep–Oct. 2008
Nov–Dec. 2008
Jan–Feb. 2009
Mar–Apr. 2009
May–June 2009
July–Aug. 2009
Sep–Oct. 2009
Nov–Dec. 2009
Jan–Feb. 2010
Mar–Apr. 2010
May–June 2010
July–Aug. 2010
Sep–Oct. 2010
Nov–Dec. 2010
Jan–Feb. 2011
Mar–Apr. 2011
May–June 2011
period of enrollment
0–17 years
18–24 years
25–34 years
35–44 years
45–54 years
55+ years
% joining each period
SOURCE: Inland Revenue 2011.
NOTE: All fi gures are as of June 30.
FIGURE 5.4 Age distribution of KiwiSaver members and KiwiSaver eligible population,
June 30, 2011
0.000
0.005
0.010
0.015
0.020
0.025
0.030
0 3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30 33 36 39 42 45 48 51 54 57 60 63
% of population
age
KiwiSaver members
eligible population
SOURCE: Inland Revenue 2011.
NOTE: The eligible population, taken from the Treasury long-term fi scal model, includes all New Zealand citizens or resi-
dents under age 65, regardless of whether they have joined the scheme.
114
MATCHING CONTRIBUTIONS FOR PENSIONS: A REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE
The age distribution year on year shows a similar pattern, as the number of enrolled
members has grown (figure 5.5). Nearly 60 percent of eligible people age 18–24 are mem-
bers; older people are at or close to the 50 percent mark.
FIGURE 5.5 Percentage of eligible population enrolled in KiwiSaver, 2008–11
age
0.0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 38 40 42 44 46 48 50 52 54 56 58 60 62 64
% of eligible individuals enrolled
2008
2009
2010
2011
SOURCE: Inland Revenue 2011.
NOTE: The eligible population, taken from the Treasury long-term fi scal model, includes all New Zealand citizens or resi-
dents under age 65, regardless of whether they have joined the scheme. Data are as of June 30.
Incomes and Contributions
The incomes of members do not differ greatly from the incomes of the eligible population
(figure 5.6). There are slightly lower proportions of KiwiSaver members at low-income
levels (up to $NZ 20,000) than in the eligible population, but slightly higher proportions
at income levels of $NZ 20,000–$NZ 50,000. These results suggest a minor affordability
effect.
Table 5.2 shows the number of KiwiSavers by source of income. More than half
(54 percent) had only wage or salary income; 23 percent had no income. Children (people
under age 18) made up 73 percent of the no income group. This group also includes full-
time students aged 18 and over, who are allowed to make contributions (or have their
families make contributions on their behalf ) and who are therefore eligible for the mem-
ber tax credit despite not working or paying income tax.
On April 1, 2009, the default rate for contributions was reduced from 4 percent to
2 percent. Table 5.3 shows the effect of the change.
The data in table 5.3 suggest a marked signaling effect through the change in the
default rate. Table 5.4 reinforces this interpretation. The majority of people (62 percent)
who joined KiwiSaver before April 1, 2009, still contribute 4 percent of their gross income,
indicating a significant degree of inertia in contribution rates, a phenomenon observed in
similar saving programs. The majority of members who joined KiwiSaver after April 1,
2009 (80 percent), are contributing 2 percent, reinforcing the importance of the default
rate in establishing participation patterns.
5. NEW ZEALAND’S EXPERIENCE WITH THE KIWISAVER SCHEME
115
The median annual contribution in 2009/10 was $NZ 880, with the lowest quartile
contributing $NZ 295 and the highest quartile contributing $NZ 1,644 (figure 5.7).
These data relate to members with salary and wage income. People not earning sal-
ary or wage income can still contribute and are incentivized to do so (if over age 18)
by the member tax credit subsidy. Figure 5.8 shows the annual contributions of people
with income from sources other than salary or wages. The two peaks at $NZ 1,040 and
$NZ 1,200 suggest that people who do not make contributions through salary or wage
deductions are clustered at the maximum thresholds, consistent with contributing to max-
imize the value of the member tax credit.
People with no income at all also exhibited twin peaks at $1,040 and $1,200, pre-
sumably for the same reason (figure 5.9).
FIGURE 5.6 Income distribution of KiwiSaver members and KiwiSaver eligible population, 2010
0.00
0.05
0.10
0.15
0.20
0.25
1–
10,000
10,001–
20,000
20,001–
30,000
30,001–
40,000
40,001–
50,000
50,001–
60,000
60,001–
70,000
70,001–
80,000
80,001–
90,000
90,001–
100,000
100,001–
110,000
110,001–
120,000
>120,000
%
income (NZ$)
KiwiSaver members
eligible population
SOURCE: Inland Revenue 2011.
NOTE: Figures are for members as of June 30, 2011. Income relates to the 2010 tax year and includes income from sal-
ary and wages (including benefi t payments) as well as income from self-employment, royalties, rental income, and other
sources. People with no income in 2010 are excluded.
TABLE 5.2 Income sources of KiwiSaver members, 2010
Income source
Number of members
Percentage of total
Salary or wage income only
945,917
54
Salary or wage plus other income
324,361
19
Other income only
76,306
4
No income
409,348
23
Total 1,755,932
100
SOURCE: Inland Revenue 2011.
NOTE: Figures are for members as of June 30, 2011. Income relates to the 2010 tax year and includes income from sal-
ary and wages (including benefi t payments) as well as income from self-employment, royalties, rental income, and other
sources.
116
MATCHING CONTRIBUTIONS FOR PENSIONS: A REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE
FIGURE 5.7 Annual KiwiSaver contributions by salary and wage earners, 2009/10
0
20
40
60
80
100
cumulative percentile (%)
0 1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
contribution amount (NZ $)
75% quintile
median
NZ$ 1,644
NZ$ 880
NZ$ 295
NZ$ 5,600+
25% quintile
SOURCE: Inland Revenue 2011.
NOTE: Figure includes contributing members with a member tax credit (MTC) claim submitted for 2009/10 with salary and
wage income only for the 2010 tax year; benefi ciaries are excluded. Only members age 18 and over are eligible to make
MTC claims. Contributions include employee deductions through the PAYE system, voluntary contributions directly to
providers, and ad hoc contributions to Inland Revenue not through the PAYE process. Figures do not include employer
contributions.
TABLE 5.3 Percentage of KiwiSavers
contributing at various rates, 2009–11
Contribution
rate (%)
2009
2010
2011
2
12 41 53
4
83 55 43
8
4 4 4
Other
< 1
< 1
< 1
Total
100 100 100
SOURCE: Inland Revenue 2011.
NOTE: Figures include all members with PAYE deductions
as of June 30, excluding members on contribution holi-
days and members who contribute directly to providers or
make ad hoc contributions to Inland Revenue not through
the PAYE system. Members’ contribution rate at year end
is based on at least two contributions over the April–June
period. Totals may not sum to 100 percent because of
rounding.
TABLE 5.4 Contribution rates of KiwiSavers by
member join date, as of 2011
Contribution
rate (%)
Before April 1,
2009
After April 1,
2009
2 33
80
4 62
18
8
5
2
Other
< 1
< 1
Total 100
100
SOURCE: Inland Revenue 2011.
NOTE: Figures include all members with PAYE deductions
as of June 30, 2011, excluding members on contribution
holidays and members who contribute directly to provid-
ers or make ad hoc contributions to Inland Revenue not
through the PAYE system. Members’ contribution rate at
year end is based on at least two contributions over the
April–June period. Totals may not sum to 100 percent
because of rounding.
5. NEW ZEALAND’S EXPERIENCE WITH THE KIWISAVER SCHEME
117
Member Tax Credit
Table 5.5 shows the proportion of members who received the maximum tax credit. Claims
for the maximum were low in 2008 (14 percent) but rose to 46 percent in 2009 and
45 percent in 2010.
Figure 5.10 shows the distribution of the member tax credit by age. The lower cred-
its paid to younger people are believed to reflect their lower earnings. The higher payments
to older people may indicate a focus on maximizing the subsidy as retirement approaches.
FIGURE 5.8 Annual KiwiSaver contribution for nonsalary and nonwage earners, 2009/10
0
5
10
15
20
(%)
0 1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
contribution amount (NZ $)
6,000
$NZ 0
$NZ 1,200
$NZ 1,040
$NZ 6,000+
SOURCE: Inland Revenue 2011.
NOTE: Figure includes all KiwiSavers who submitted a member tax credit claim for 2009/10 but for whom no salary or wage
income was recorded through the PAYE system for the 2010 tax year.
FIGURE 5.9 Annual contribution by KiwiSavers with no income, 2009/10
0
5
10
(%)
0 500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
contribution amount (NZ $)
3,000
$NZ 1,200
$NZ 1,040
$NZ 3,000+
SOURCE: Inland Revenue 2011.
NOTE: Figure includes all KiwiSavers who submitted a member tax credit claim for 2009/10 who earned no income in 2010.
Most of the 23 percent of members with no income are under age 18.
118
MATCHING CONTRIBUTIONS FOR PENSIONS: A REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE
Providers
Since 2008, there has been a steady increase in the share of KiwiSaver members who
choose their own scheme. Between 2008 and 2011, the share of members allocated to
default schemes declined by 12 percentage points, the share of members in employer-
nominated schemes fell by 3 percentage points, and the share of members actively choos-
ing to join the scheme rose by 15 percentage points (table 5.6).
Members are able to transfer between schemes, including transferring from the
scheme nominated by their employer to another scheme (table 5.7). Transfer may occur
during the eight-week opt-out period following automatic enrollment; members may also
transfer from one scheme to another at any time. Transfers across schemes are referred to
as “standard” transfers.
Standard transfers number about 110,000 a year, about 6 percent of member-
ship (figure 5.11). Matthews (2011) suggests that people who switch tend to switch to a
scheme run by their bank. Providers claim that they are not able to remunerate financial
FIGURE 5.10 Member tax credit granted to KiwiSavers, by age, 2011
0
20
40
60
80
100
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