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Ryan Bridge: Is paying tax through your working life really worth the pension?

Author
Ryan Bridge ,
Publish Date
Thu, 22 May 2025, 6:29am
A new OECD report suggests the Kiwi pension is the sixth worst in the world, with retirees getting just 43 percent of the average working wage. (Photo \ Getty Images)
A new OECD report suggests the Kiwi pension is the sixth worst in the world, with retirees getting just 43 percent of the average working wage. (Photo \ Getty Images)

Ryan Bridge: Is paying tax through your working life really worth the pension?

Author
Ryan Bridge ,
Publish Date
Thu, 22 May 2025, 6:29am

Providing I make it to 65, and you don't count your blessings, but assuming for a second that I do, I don't expect I'll be receiving the full pension. 

And you know what? I'd rather receive less, at a later age, than pay more taxes through my working life.

In 2006, the number of Kiwis aged 65+ was 495,000.

It's increasing by about 80 people a day and is likely to reach 1 million by 2028.

By 2050? 1.5 million. 

Compared to the OECD, we have the highest basic pension paid from general taxes.

With fewer young people working to support it, Treasury has long forecast a cost blowout and the need for much higher taxes to afford this system. 

Personally, I'd like to take a pass on that. 

With about another 30 years on the clock before reaching this magical age, how much extra tax must I pay? 

Which colour government will be in charge when the inevitable happens? 

Why can't I instead invest my own money, and with the help of compounding returns, hopefully set myself up for my own retirement?

Whatever measly amount I might get, I don't expect to get at 65. The UK, Australia, Denmark, US, Germany France and the Netherlands have all increased the age threshold. We will of course do the same at some point. 

Like most Kiwis, I hope, and again, you don't count your blessings, will have invested wisely and saved adequately to feed and house myself. 

If that changes, then a means tested system should always be a safety net. 

But at some point, it'll have to move from Think Big, to think Smaller. NZ Super will have to go on a diet. 

Crash dieting is never a sustainable way to trim the fat. Smaller, incremental changes over a long period of time afford best results. 

The same is true of NZ Super. And if the choice is higher taxes for 20 or 30 years instead of me investing that money myself. I'd back myself over the State any day. 

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