"I would love to have seen the $1000 kick-start stay for a sub-set of people in their first job."
Speaking after the conference Maxwell, who is currently reviewing New Zealand's retirement income policy, said she would like to see the kick-start reinstated for that group.
But a spokesperson for English, who last week declared a $1.8 billion surplus, said it was not considering reinstating the $1000 KiwiSaver kickstart payment.
"New workers are already auto-enrolled into KiwiSaver when starting a new job. This, combined with the 3 per cent employer contribution and the member tax credit of up to $521 each year, means there are still ample incentives to sign-up to KiwiSaver and to keep saving for retirement."
The spokesperson said the government was forecast to spend $728 million on the KiwiSaver member tax credit plus $13 billion on New Zealand Superannuation and removing the kick-start payment had saved over $500 million over four years - money that was reinvested into priority public services.