The first report on “Pensions and Politics” generated several interesting replies from Members of Parliament.
One
particularly important reply (May 27, 2002) came from the Attorney General of
New Zealand, the Hon Margaret Wilson. In
her reply she defended her government’s performance and denied that the
government had been dragging its feet on the issue claiming that it was doing
all it could to find a solution. She
expressed the opinion that any major ad hoc change to the system would not be
acceptable. She went on to say that
New Zealand Superannuation (NZS) had never been designed to be portable but
designed to cater for NZ residents only, and that the portability provisions
subsequently bolted onto the system had never sat comfortably with the
fundamental principles of NZS. It
is clearly apparent from Ms Wilson’s reply that any proposition to end the
pension problem with the United States would be dismissed by the government on
the grounds it would not support any change affecting only one country and (in
her own words) “merely replace one
injustice with another”.
The
Social Services Minister, the Hon Steve Maharey, has likewise dismissed the
proposition to end the pension problem on the grounds that he does not condone a
solution that would “simply replace on
injustice with another”. These
comments signal a major concession from high ranking members of government, that
is, recognition that the payment to eligible Americans (and other nationalities)
of only half their entitlement to NZS if they retire outside NZ is an
injustice. With this official
recognition, some progress might now be possible.
A
disturbing feature of the correspondence from the two Ministers was the level of
misunderstanding of the original proposal in the 1st report, namely, to
implement a fully equitable system. Accordingly, this second report intends to:
(i)
Clarify
the original proposals.
(ii)
Discuss
issues raised by the Attorney General.
(iii)
Examine
the most insidious aspects of NZ Super.
(iv)
Revisit
aspects of fairness.
(v)
Identify
responsibility for Superannuation policies.
(vi)
Highlight
the plight of NZ citizens who have been abandoned.
(vii)
Review
aspects of portability.
(viii)
Draw
attention to web sites.
(ix)
And,
propose an alternative solution to this most vexed issue.
(i)
CLARIFICATION OF THE ORIGINAL PROPOSALS
In
her reply to the 1st report the Attorney General made reference to
fundamental principles, whereas the 1st report submitted to
Parliament in April 2002 focused on fundamental issues.
The difference is important. In
the sections “Who Pays the Piper” and “Who has Responsibility” (pages 14
– 16) it was asserted that every NZ resident pays for their retirement pension
through the form of general taxation and that it cannot, under any
circumstances, be construed as “pro bono”, i.e. a gift from the government.
Bearing in mind this fundamental issue, it is difficult to understand how
any democratically elected government can arbitrarily determine that some people
will be paid their full entitlements, some only half, and others nothing at all.
Despite the report’s wide readership it is worth noting that no one
(including Parliamentarians) has come forth to openly dispute or contradict
these assertions.
Based
on the widely accepted constitutional principle that all have the inalienable
and democratic right to be treated equally under the law, the original report
put forward proposals to remedy the injustices arising from the current
retirement policies. Succinctly,
the 1st report asserted that:
(i)
All who
qualify for full NZ Supernannuation should be paid their full entitlement,
irrespective of where they choose to live in their retirement.
(ii)
The
arbitrary and capricious restrictions governing the application of NZS be
removed, and
(iii)
The
unethical appropriation of beneficiaries’ overseas pension funds to be
discontinued forthwith.
It
is unfortunate that readers who merely scanned the document were misled by the
recommendation that, as a first step
towards breaking the impasse with the US, eligible Americans should be
allowed to return home with NZS at the full rate. Consequently these readers misinterpreted the report to be
aimed solely at the NZ/US pension issues. On
the contrary, the emphasis in the report was on a fully equitable system
(particularly in the area where the incremental cost is negated); unfortunately
some readers failed to realize that this proposition was intended to be
available to everyone who was eligible, everywhere.
(ii)
ISSUES RAISED BY THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
There
has never been any disagreement with the general consensus that NZ Super was not
designed to be portable. When NZ
first introduced a pension scheme in 1898 (subsequently upgraded by Michael
Joseph Savage’s dual pension program in 1938) the nation’s isolation and
poor communications meant that portability was an issue that did not need
consideration. However, in the
latter half of the 20th century, in a much-changed world, the
government belatedly recognized that some form of portability was necessary to
satisfy the pressures created by international obligations.
Regrettably, politicians both past and present have opted to take the
line of least resistance and settle for bilateral arrangements with complete
disregard for the difficulties being left for future generations. As a consequence portability arrangements “bolted” onto
the system have never sat comfortably with the original framework of NZS, as the
government is now conceding.
In
view of this ad hoc approach it is not difficult to see why NZ has been unable
to secure arrangements with larger nations such as Germany and Japan but has
settled instead for agreements with the likes of Guernsey and Jersey.
Currently there is an arrangement with Greece affecting some 150 people,
a figure expected to decline in the future.
Negotiations are advanced with a ninth nation, Cyprus, a development that
will undoubtedly please the miniscule Cypriot community in NZ who may have
thoughts of returning home. It
should not be overlooked that this particular arrangement would also benefit any
New Zealander who might be tempted to retire in that troubled island in the
Mediterranean. In stark contrast to
places of minor significance, NZ has been unable to secure portability with the
US, according to the 1990 census home to 15,000 NZ citizens.
Figures from the 2000 census are still not available (August 2002), but
since 1990 the number of Kiwis in the US has increased notably.
Arrangements
do exist with some countries that have strong historical ties with NZ.
The current arrangements with the UK are barely satisfactory (though the
blame is partly due to Whitehall’s lack of indexing pensions for Britons
living in former “colonies”). But
the example that best illustrates how uncomfortably portability sits with NZS is
the Netherlands. Irate Dutch
residents living in NZ have taken their grievances over pension anomalies to the
office of the Ombudsmen who has had to decline jurisdiction as their grievances
relate to matters of government policy. An
appeal to the High Court resulted in a referral to a future revision of the
bilateral agreement, and the present Social Services Minister did in fact sign a
new agreement with officials in The Hague.
However, the Dutch Parliament (noting
that it has never experienced any major pension difficulties with any other
world nation) has still not ratified the agreement due to the
problematic nature of NZS, and unacceptable changes that NZ bureaucrats wanted
to implement.
(iii)
AN INSIDIOUS ASPECT OF NZ SUPERANNUATION
A
much-criticized section of the NZ system is Section 70 (S.70) of the NZ
Social Security Act. Section 70
has its genesis in the Michael Joseph
Savage pension package of 1938 - in other words it has been around for a
very long time (it was formerly known as Section 65 until the various Sections
of the Act were renumbered in 1964). S.70
establishes the right of NZ government agencies to offset the pension funds from
another country against the cost of the NZS entitlement.
Strictly speaking the NZ government doesn’t “physically seize” the
funds a retiree may have paid into any overseas State pension plan but it does
the next best thing – it forcibly deducts those funds from the amount of Super
the pensioner is entitled to receive.
Work
and Income NZ (WINZ) requires all NZ Superannuation applicants to declare if
they are eligible to receive any form of pension from outside NZ.
Foreign-born retirees are bullied into applying to their country of
origin for any retirement benefits that may be due them.
Then, under Section 70 WINZ deducts any overseas State retirement income
from a pensioner’s NZS payments. Furthermore,
any foreign born person who fails to apply to his/her native country for any
possible pension entitlement, through Section 81 of the NZ SS Act, WINZ
ruthlessly stops all NZS payments.
An
example that clearly illustrates how Section 70 operates relates to the case of
a retired German lady resident in NZ. Having
lived as an adult in Germany for 23 years she is entitled to a German pension of
NZ$13,200 gross annually. She has
since lived 30 years in NZ (27 years up to the age of 65) and more than
adequately fulfills the eligibility requirements for NZS.
Now widowed, she is entitled to a NZS gross payment of NZ$14,992 a year
(the amount currently paid to singles living alone), however through the
application of S.70 the full amount of her German pension is deducted leaving
her with an annual gross Super payment of just $1,792.
Next, NZ income tax not only wipes out her small NZS payments but also
takes a chunk out of her pension from Germany.
There is no debate that general taxation affords this person the right to
benefit from the nation’s amenities such as roads, public health and so on. But after 27 years of contributing to the nation she
is literally given nothing in return, which is grossly unfair.
Under a more equitable and just system she should at least be entitled to
a payment proportional or representative of her years of contribution to the NZ
economy, e.g. 27/40th. The
German lady has appealed this case but failed because S.70 is statute law; for
the same reason appeals have failed for countless
other persons in similar circumstances.
This
example clearly highlights the hypocrisy of officialdom that lectures the public
on the need to save for their retirement and not to place reliance on NZS as a
sole means of support in old age. No
mention is ever made of the fact that the government agency WINZ is technically
and legally permitted to “rob” the aged of any earlier savings they have in
the form of overseas pension entitlements. It is difficult to imagine what goes on in the minds of
bureaucrats and politicians who sponsor and condone the State’s taking
advantage of the elderly through the implementation of administrative red tape.
Much
of the information contained in this and the 1st report has not been easy to
obtain. The proposals made in the 1st
report were predicated on the belief that the incremental cost to the nation
would not be significant. Data that
has since come to hand shows that the deduction of overseas retirement funds
actually reduces the cost of New Zealand’s pension payouts by an amount
significantly greater than previously imagined. Section 70 enables the
NZ government to reduce the cost of its pension program by hundreds of millions
of dollars every year. Figures
made available to Dr Michael Cullen (now Deputy Prime Minister) in 1998 revealed
(in that year alone) that there was a deduction of NZ$6.7 million in pension
payments to persons of Dutch origin. The
equivalent sum for persons of British origin was NZ$101 million - and so the
list of deductions continued. It is
therefore hardly surprising any proposals that would spell an end to this source
of revenue would not be openly welcomed. It
obviously suits the authorities to
keep the public uninformed on this sensitive issue.
In
the first “Pensions and Politics” the US was accused of not doing enough to
end the pension imbalance. However
for its part NZ authorities have done nothing
whatsoever to resolve the problem, and
the ongoing retention of Section 70 is not only considered repugnant but also a
major impediment to the resolution of pension problems with the US (and indeed
other major countries).
No
one can condone the US policy of compelling New Zealanders living in that nation
to put money aside for their retirement, and then deny them what they have paid
on the basis of their nationality. But
there are compelling arguments underlying this action.
Frankly, it is NOT unreasonable of American authorities to disapprove of
arrangements that would permit Social Security payments to eligible New
Zealanders who return home, when the primary objective of WINZ is to appropriate
those payments from the United States wherever possible to help fund the New
Zealand pension program.
(iv)
A QUESTION OF FAIRNESS REVISITED
Pension
injustices are not confined to people born outside NZ.
A retired NZ couple that has contributed an entire working lifetime to
the nation recently decided to move to New Mexico to be close to an only child
and their grandchildren. As a result of the move these elderly New Zealanders will be
entitled to only half the going rate of NZS, a situation that is neither
just nor equitable. To make matters
even worse, if they do not have the presence of mind to apply for NZS prior to
leaving NZ, they then completely lose their half entitlement and get nothing.
This is simply unfair bureaucratic red tape.
In
a defensive reaction to criticism the Attorney General and Cabinet Ministers
have identified unfairness of a different nature, citing the unfairness
associated with the payment of the full NZ pension to anyone after just 10 years
residency (including, of course, 5 years after their 50th year).
Citing one injustice as the offset to another is both immoral and
inexcusable. Two wrongs do not make a right.
Although this complaint may have some merit it seems somewhat
disingenuous when both the complaint and the remedy lie within the Ministers’
own hands. What seems ironic is
that it was Members of Parliament who reduced the existing residency criteria
from 20 years to 10 years in 1978 following a petition of a mere 3,000
signatures (predominantly elderly migrant workers) and a subsequent
recommendation of a Royal Commission. This
change further exemplifies the bolt-on nature of NZ Super, in this instance the
exception being made the rule. It
once again raises the twin issues of equity and justice in the administration of
NZS. The Attorney General does have
a point in that it is “overly generous” for any person to receive a full
NZ pension after just 10 years residency. However
the absurdity of this example pales in to insignificance when contrasted with a
person who has worked in NZ all their
life and who subsequently moves to the USA: that person is entitled to only half
a pension. If Cabinet Ministers,
who are responsible for management and change of the legislation are not
prepared to act and rectify the illogical and haphazard approach to NZ Super,
then they must expect their own complaints to fall on deaf ears.
The
unfairness and the absurdity of the NZ system is further evidenced in the policy
of terminating payments to resident pensioners who travel overseas for 6 months
or more. In the case of the retired
couple going to New Mexico, if they decide not to move permanently away from NZ
but visit New Mexico for a year or so, after 6 months WINZ stops their
entire Super payments. However,
if they return to NZ every 6 months and submit to “re-testing” then payments
may be continued, a situation equal to the plight of the Kiwis forced to
travel to the US every 180 days to obtain their US Social Security per the 1st
report).
When it comes to unfairness, probably no other nation on earth has surpassed NZ in devising ways to take advantage of the elderly and deprive them of what they have earned.
(v)
REPONSIBILITY FOR PENSION POLICIES
Copies
of the 1st report “Pensions and Politics” were sent to prominent
politicians in all the political parties. Aside
from the on-going interest shown by Steve Maharey, Lianne Dalziel and Tim
Barnett, it was disappointing that only two out of New Zealand’s 120 elected
representatives were outspoken in their genuine concern and support for change
to end the pension imbalance with the US. The two were United Future Leader Peter Dunne and Green Party
MP Sue Bradford. Prior to the
recent elections one party leader was asked at a media interview if he had read
the report. He replied that he had
not bothered to read beyond the first page as the subject matter was too
complex, then added “but I’m passionate about rubbish”. It was encouraging
that many Parliamentarians demonstrated interest in the report, but from their
responses it was obvious they knew very little about how the nation’s pension
program actually functions.
It
is usual for Cabinet Ministers to rely on senior Ministry officials for
information and advice and it would seem that top civil servants are the only
persons who are completely au fait with NZ Super regulations.
It is the responsibility of departmental heads to administer the
legislation enacted by Parliament, irrespective of its inadequacies or
shortcomings. It must be borne in
mind that only Members of Parliament can create or amend laws - but this is not
to say that senior officials do not have discretionary powers.
S.70 of the NZ SS Act authorizes the deduction of any overseas State
sponsored pensions from NZS payments, and contains a clause whereby any
uncertainty concerning the deductibility of an overseas pension may be decided
“in the Chief Executive’s opinion”.
There
is cause for concern that in the case of NZ Super no official body has ever been
appointed to monitor and review the Executive to ensure that it has not been
excessively zealous in its intent to save the government money.
There is also concern that Ministry officials may have not been providing
proper information to Cabinet Ministers on the complaints over injustices that
have arisen as a result of the current laws.
The latter concern is amplified after re-examining the case of the German
lady, mentioned previously. After
unsatisfactory dealings with bureaucracy the German lady appealed to Parliament. The Minister of Social Services, Steve Maharey, in his
response (June 6, 2001) relied on advice supplied by the Chief Executive, advice
that can only be described as hypocritical, and information that is, at best,
questionable.
In
a quote from the Chief Executive, the Minister’s letter argues that where
other countries do not provide full Social Security benefits until 40 to 50
years of contributions, NZ provides a full pension after only 10 years
residency. But this smacks of
hypocrisy: in this particular case New Zealand’s generosity is cited as a
major benefit - whereas in other cases it has been cited as a major injustice.
Thus S.70 becomes a Catch-22: it can be a convenient justification for
the appropriation of overseas pensions or an excuse not to pay full pension
rights to beneficiaries living overseas on retirement.
The
Minister’s letter continues: “The deduction of overseas pensions from NZS
therefore places NZ in a situation that approximates that of overseas countries,
in that NZ will limit the extent to which they pay a pension by the amount of
any overseas pension that is received”. In this instance the Minister has either been misinformed or
he is ignorant of the fact that this statement is patently false.
At the risk of being repetitious, it was clearly documented in the 1st
report (page 17) and reiterated in this report that NZ is the only
country in the world that limits the extent to which a pension is paid by the
amount of any overseas pension that is received.
Superannuation
is not one of the portfolios of the Attorney General and it is assumed that her
reply to “Pensions and Politics” reflected the views of the Chief Executive,
and her party. In his own response
to the report the Social Services Minister concedes that he was unable to reply
“until officials at the Ministry of Social Development had considered the
report”.
Serious
questions are asked as to the nature of the brief provided by the Ministry
regarding the 1st report. It
is natural to expect officials would be asked to check the veracity of the facts
and figures and report back and comment on the civil administration of some of
the issues raised. But they are not
expected to provide opinions on the rights and wrongs of policy matters that are
rightly the prerogative of Parliamentarians.
The
interesting question is raised as to who is ultimately making the policy
on the nation’s pension program?
(vi)
NEW ZEALAND CITIZENS ABANDONED
The
NZ government has recently taken steps to inform as many Kiwis in the US as
possible that if they choose to remain NZ citizens they cannot bring their US
Social Security entitlements with them if they return to NZ to retire.
Considering that many of these persons would not meet the 10 year
residency criteria for NZ Super, the government has essentially sent out a
message to its citizens in North America stating “We don’t want you back –
but if you decide to return, only come back as US citizens”.
Despite
the supposedly “altruistic” motive this message has deplorable overtones.
Other than this warning message, bureaucrats and politicians have done
nothing to alleviate the unfortunate circumstances of NZ citizens who have
returned to NZ only to discover they have lost their US pensions, and do
not meet the NZ pension qualifications. For
decades elderly New Zealanders have been coming home from North America to live
out their retirement only to face the rude shock they have lost their pension
from the US, through no fault of their own.
For some, ineligibility for NZ Super has meant the cruel ordeal of
returning to the US every 180 days to obtain a pension, as earlier reported.
In
a recent public statement one political figure dismissed these persons saying
that they had “abandoned their country” and “deserved what was coming to
them”. These people did not
abandon their country, nor did they renounce their allegiance to the
Crown.
For
many years bureaucrats and politicians alike have ignored the predicament of
these people. It would not be difficult to enact legislation that would grant full NZ
Super eligibility, regardless of residency criteria, for NZ citizens who have
returned home and lost all or any right to US Social Security.
These people forfeited their right to a US pension because of policies
of the NZ government. To its
discredit, the NZ government has refused to accept responsibility for its own
actions.
This
report asks the NZ government why has it done nothing to provide for its
citizens caught in these unfortunate circumstances?
(vii)
THE REVIEW OF PORTABILITY
The
Minister of Social Services announced in May 2001 the appointment of a committee
to conduct a ‘Review of Portability’, at the time regarded as a timely and
positive step by the Minister. Although
the terms of reference were not made public it was hoped that the committee
would include a serious review of not only the contentious Section 70 but also
other aspects of NZS that hinder portability with major nations including the
US.
It
is disturbing to note that the review has still not made its debut and the
long-standing status quo remains. The
latest word on the review is that it is “nearing completion”.
The length of time taken to complete this review could be a sign that it
is not considered a matter of priority, or, hopefully, that an extremely
thorough and comprehensive investigation is being undertaken.
When the review is finally completed, there is no guarantee that the
findings will be made public but kept, instead, behind closed doors, privy to a
select few. (As the only member of
the public to make a submission to the review committee, a copy of the final
report has been requested under the Freedom of Information Act. To date it remains unclear if a copy will be provided).
The
fate of the still unreleased Review of Portability may be complicated as a
direct result of the recent elections, and the formation of a new MMP
government. Political commentators
have observed that the former Labor led coalition has emerged weaker, not
stronger, from the July 27 elections, and the Green Party has openly vowed to
bring down the government on a single issue if it doesn’t get its way.
Co-leader Rod Donald has stated that his party does not favor
portability of NZ Super and opposes any moves on the part of the NZ government
to end the pension problem with the US (The
Press, 7/16/02).
It
is not inconceivable therefore that the government, regardless of any
recommendations made by the review committee, will decide that changes to NZ
Super at the present time are an unacceptable political risk.
The request for the Review of Portability was internal, accordingly the
Minister of Social Services is not bound to make any details public.
If the decision is made not to act on any of the review’s
recommendations, the review can be quietly filed away and forgotten – and the
nation will be none the wiser.
(viii)
WEB SITES
In
May 2002 copies of the 1st report “Pensions and Politics” went
out to Kiwi Associations in every major city in the US, Puerto Rico, Guam and
the Hawaiian Islands. To facilitate wider readership requests were received from
Sacramento to New York for the creation of web sites to give New Zealanders in
North America the opportunity to read why they could not take their US SS home
with them. The first web site was
actually set up by Americans at Hastings College of the Law (University of
California) then this was quickly followed with a web site set up in Salt Lake
City by a group of New Zealanders. It
is believed that other web-sites exist, but addresses for the first two have
been given to the electorate offices of Lianne Dalziel, Tim Barnett and Sue
Bradford.
These
two web-sites are:
http://www.uchastings.edu/boswell_01/arnesen_page.htm
And
http://www.nzas.org/NZGOV.htm Then
proceed to PENSIONS-POLITICS
Copies
of the 1st report were also sent to the State Department, US
Ambassador to Wellington, Charles Swindells, and the Commissioner for the Social
Security Administration in Baltimore. Paul
Butcher, the SSA Associate Commissioner for International Affairs, and successor
to the late Barry Powell (mentioned in the first report), personally replied to
the report and confirmed that US officials are continuing to closely monitor the
NZ situation. By way of contrast,
GREYPOWER, an ineffectual organization that purports to champion the rights of
the aged in NZ, showed no interest whatsoever and did not even bother to
acknowledge receiving the report.
The
web sites in North America have been accessed from different parts of the world
(including NZ) and there can be no doubt the report has generated interest.
The same web sites proved effective in the run-up to the recent
elections, informing ex-pats of how each political party responded to the
report, as well as those politicians who showed concern for overseas New
Zealanders and those who supported portability arrangements.
The potential of using web sites in future elections to inform overseas
New Zealanders as to which political parties best serve their interests is only
just being realized.
Within 48 hours of this second report being sent to Parliament the various Kiwi Associations in the US will be alerted. This report will then be posted on the web for the interest of overseas New Zealanders who are now well informed and deeply concerned over their government’s responsibility for the pension situation with the United States.
(ix)
AN ALTERNATE PROPOSAL
In
an effort to facilitate the resolution of this issue a second proposal is now
put forward for discussion and approval by the present NZ government.
The
proposal is designed to not only resolve portability issues between New Zealand
and the United States of America but also put the NZ system on a similar footing
with Social Security systems in Europe and Canada.
Additionally the proposal paves the way for agreements with major nations
such as Germany and Austria. The
proposal is also based on the implementation of a uniform policy that would
eliminate the most unjust aspects of the current policy.
Moreover it would eliminate the need for the much-criticized Section 70
of the NZ SS Act except for certain humanitarian provisions.
Finally, the proposal would not be difficult to implement nor would the
cost involved be prohibitive.
Broadly
it is proposed that a proportional system of pension payment be extended to
everyone. The detailed proposal is
as follows:
(i)
The basic
ten-year minimum residency qualification for NZS is retained.
(ii)
All
persons who fulfil the residency criteria become eligible for NZS on reaching 65
years of age, regardless of where they live at the time.
(iii)
The
payment of NZS is to be calculated on a pro rata basis, either one 45th
of the full rate of NZS for every year of NZ residency between the ages of 20
and 65, or one 40th of the full rate for every year of NZ residency,
ages 25 to 65.*
(iv)
With a
proportional system of NZS payment based on the number of years of NZ residency
Section 70 of the NZ Social Security Act is redundant.
(v)
In lieu
of the present Section 70, a new Section is to be created that provides
anti-accumulation mechanisms for widows, invalids and sickness beneficiaries,
plus guarantees for refugees, asylum seekers, and others deemed worthy of
special protection. This section
would be administered with discretionary powers given to the Minister or his
appointees.
(vi) Restrictions on the application for NZS to be removed. Those eligible for NZS on reaching the age of 65 are to be permitted to apply for payments from anywhere and at any time
*
With many young New Zealanders forced to work overseas, most often to repay
student debt, the rate of one 40th is suggested as more just,
decreasing the chances of students being doubly penalized.
Objections
to these proposals might be voiced by British migrants, disadvantaged by the UK
policy of non-indexing its pensions to persons living in former colonies.
Any objections could be avoided through the system of
“grand-parenting”. Further, NZ
could join Australia and break off its current agreements with the UK on the
basis of the UK’s archaic and out-of-place policy in refusing to index
pensions to beneficiaries living in other parts of the Commonwealth.
(x)
CONCLUSION
In
her reply to the 1st report the Attorney General, the Hon Margaret
Wilson, claimed that the government has not been dragging its feet on the issue
of portability with the United States. Although
no criticism had been leveled at the current administration it was evident that
the suggestion had touched a raw nerve. However
heartening it is to be told that the appropriate authorities are actively
engaged in the process of resolving this long standing issue, there was
absolutely no evidence provided to support the veracity of this statement.
It would take a great leap of faith to assume that the issue was now
progressing to a resolution.
The
only real evidence that government has taken some tentative steps on this issue
is the much-vaunted ‘Review of Portability’.
Unfortunately comments made by the Attorney General and the Social
Services Minister prior to the release of
this report must be viewed as a portent that it is highly unlikely to
address the current pension injustice. Skeptics
will view these comments from Ministers of the Crown as unhelpful as they not
only indicate that the outcome has been prejudged, but that they also look like
an overt effort to exert high level influence over the review’s findings and
recommendations. Despite the
pessimism surrounding the review, when it is finally completed one can only hope
that it will be subjected to critical analysis and
public scrutiny.
The
unfairness, inconsistencies and inequity of the NZ retirement program have
existed far too long and cannot be ignored indefinitely.
Changes to NZ Super are desperately overdue.
But there appears to have been a complete lack of political will in past
decades to make the changes needed. In
the first report it was pointed out that cost is not an acceptable excuse to
evade the correction of social injustice. Cost
has not been an inhibiting factor in the correction of many past social
injustices, and it should not be used – as it has been used – as an
excuse to avoid rectifying any injustices that affect the elderly, particularly
in the Superannuation arena.
In
the past decade Task Forces have been appointed to monitor and make
recommendations to the government on Superannuation and are supposed to be
appointed every five years. Details
of the 1992 Task Force are sketchy but it is known that changes were recommended
– however there were no major legislative changes made in the aftermath of
this Task Force. The Periodic
Report Group on Super (also known as the Todd Task Force) of 1997 advocated the
expansion of portability and advised that changes to NZS were needed.
The recommendations were “shelved”.
About
the same time the Department of Social Welfare was charged to examine (a) the
direct deduction policy of S.70, and (b) the right to take NZS to countries with
which NZ does not have social security agreements.
To date the Department’s examinations have either not been made known,
or not completed. The Super 2000
Task Force is understood to have been reaching similar conclusions to those of
the 1997 Periodic Report Group, however it was abruptly disbanded, thrown out,
by the present government. During
the past decade the various political parties entered an agreement to prevent
Super from becoming a political football, known as the Superannuation Accord.
When the first major change was contemplated (Dr Cullen’s Super Fund)
the Accord collapsed.
Despite
all of these reviews, reports, accords and task forces the net effect is that
nothing has changed and major injustices have been allowed to continue.
There can be only one inevitable conclusion and that is the
administration (politicians and bureaucrats alike) for many years have walked
away from their responsibility towards Superannuation.
This situation is untenable because only the administration has
the power to rectify these injustices.
Pressure
is beginning to grow. During the
past decade countless distressed Kiwis have written to Members of Parliament on
learning that they have lost the right to US Social Security.
The standard reply, with minor variations, has been “Rest assured, we
are doing everything possible to find a solution”.
It is no longer acceptable for NZ citizens to be dismissed in this
manner, and it is axiomatic that we
can no longer REST ASSURED.
The
first report “Pensions and Politics” highlighted, in language people could
understand, the nation’s failure to secure portability arrangements with the
US. The large numbers of New
Zealanders who suffer as a result are now aware that their
own government is responsible for this misfortune.
Reasoned
and equitable proposals have been made to this government that would bring an
end to the lack of portability with the US and benefit thousands of NZ citizens
working in North America. These
proposals would also open the way for portability arrangements with other major
countries, they would provide an equitable system to the benefit of all New
Zealanders, and it would end the despicable practice of seizing foreign earned
pensions, a practice that stains the honor and integrity of the nation.
The
time has arrived for the Minister of Social Services, the Hon Steve Maharey, to
recognize and face up to the problems associated with New Zealand Superannuation,
to assume the responsibility the Office demands, and to take the necessary
remedial action to end the major injustices outlined in this report.
September
16, 2002
Christchurch,
New Zealand
Prepared by:
Christopher Arnesen
470 Collingwood St.,
#4
460 Marine Parade
San Francisco, Ca.
94114
Christchurch 8007 New Zealand
Tel: (415) 550
7525
Tel (3) 38 22 500
E-mail: chrisarnesen@clear.net.nz
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