With employer KiwiSaver contributions set to increase to 6 per cent from next tax year, split evenly between employee and employer, the relative value of the tax credit will diminish further (and degrade even more over time as it is not inflation-indexed).
Most employees, however, probably won't even notice the post-tax reduction in their KiwiSaver contributions due to irregular reporting and general apathy. And for many the scheme remains a decent savings vehicle in that;
•Employees need to join KiwiSaver to get the compulsory employer contributions (albeit that these are probably foregone wage increases);
•It imposes an easy savings discipline.
From a government perspective, however, the new employer contributions impost leaves the system just about tax neutral, excluding the $1,000 kickstart payment.
Compared to the Australian superannuation system, even the original KiwiSaver tax incentives looked anaemic, now the contrast is startling.
But Australia, too, is looking to rein in its super tax generosity. Wayne Swann, Australian Treasurer, will reportedly claw back about A$1 billion in super tax concessions to the super rich in his upcoming budget, an option Bill English no longer has.