Not too late to change abhorrently wasteful policy

Opinion: Adjustments to Winter Energy Payments could save the Government $450 million; money low-income workers could use as NZ exits lockdown, writes Susan St John.

A cosy fire burns in a brick grate: Anecdotal evidence suggests many affluent superannuitants don't notice the Winter Energy Payment increase on their NZ Super. Photo: iStock
Anecdotal evidence suggests many affluent superannuitants don't notice the Winter Energy Payment increase on their NZ Super. Photo: iStock

Most policy analysts would agree that while national emergencies such as Covid-19 justify an immediate response, the policies chosen to cushion the impact should be adequately scrutinised and well-designed.

Broadly speaking, policies should be effective in alleviating poverty and sharing the pain, reflect agreed principles, and have minimal unnecessary fiscal consequences.

For workers, the immediate Covid-19 response was to keep employees linked to their employer with an employer-based wage subsidy for 12 weeks. This was understandable as a measure to have an immediate effect. Now it needs to be integrated into a modernised welfare system to meet the new realities of permanent job losses and redeployment.

The other three Covid-19 welfare measures to support those on low incomes all need rethinking. The first two: a modest $25 increase in weekly core benefits, a minor, poorly-designed partial extension of the In Work Tax Credit need urgent scrutiny, but the third plank, the enhanced Winter Energy Payment, is the least well-targeted.

The first two have an annual cost of $600m and $32m respectively while the Winter Energy Payment (WEP) for the coming financial year rises from $480m in 2019 to $960m in 2020. Each beneficiary and superannuitant is entitled to a tax-free $900 if single, and $700 if married or with dependents, paid over 22 weeks from May 1.

For those on benefits, the WEP is a much-needed boost and will help reduce the pressure on foodbanks and the demand for supplementary assistance at Work and Income. But this payment also goes automatically to all superannuitants no matter how wealthy.

Experience in 2019 showed that only a tiny fraction, just 2000 out of nearly 800,000 superannuitants, chose to opt out. Opting out requires deliberate action and is easy for busy people to overlook. Some may have donated their WEP to charity (and received the tax rebate), we just don’t know. Anecdotal evidence suggests that most affluent superannuitants didn’t notice the increase, just as they hardly notice NZ Super itself as it is such a small part of their income.

The WEP is not even taxable, so high-income superannuitants can retain the full amount. In today's circumstances it is clear to many older people that they too should be sharing the cost of the Covid-19 recession. Thus, if superannuitants were required to opt in to order to receive the WEP, many better-off pensioners would choose not to ask for it.

The MSD figures show another possibility is to give the WEP automatically to those superannuitants who are also getting the disability payment, the means-tested accommodation supplement, any food grants, or supplementary hardship support. Others could still opt in if they wish, no stigma, and no questions asked.

Fiscal waste is abhorrent given the huge challenge to the Government’s budget in the post-lockdown world. We might expect that under an opt-in arrangement only around 25 percent of superannuitants would receive the WEP, saving roughly $450m. These savings could be used for example, to help the many low-income people who are not on benefits and who will really need some help in the coming winter. They currently don’t qualify for the WEP but may be just as in need of it as others on benefits.

The WEP needs to be even further scrutinised to make sure it reflects agreed principles of good policy design. Currently it reinforces outmoded relationship stereotypes. Why should two singles who share a home get $400 more WEP than a couple? Can that really be justified on grounds that being in a relationship reduces heating costs in winter? Who defines whether you are in relationship or not? It is not too late to adjust this policy.

Susan St John is Associate Professor of Economics in the Business School and Director of the Retirement Policy and Research Centre.

This article reflects the opinion of the author and not necessarily the views of the University of Auckland.

Used with permission from Newsroom Not too late to change abhorrently wasteful policy 23 April 2020.

Media queries

Alison Sims | Research Communications Editor
DDI
09 923 4953
Mob 021 249 0089
Email alison.sims@auckland.ac.nz