New Zealand First leader Winston Peters has announced a proposal to automatically enrol every newborn New Zealand citizen into KiwiSaver, with a one-off $1000 government contribution paid at birth. The policy has been framed as the start of a “KiwiSaver Generation”, alongside the party’s longer-standing call for compulsory KiwiSaver and
KiwiSaver from birth? It’s a big idea worth debating – but the details will decide whether it truly delivers - Generate Wealth Weekly
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New Zealand First leader Winston Peters has announced a proposal to automatically enrol every newborn New Zealand citizen into KiwiSaver, with a one-off $1000 government contribution paid at birth. Photo / Dean Purcell
Beyond the individual benefit, there’s a broader system upside. KiwiSaver has become a cornerstone of New Zealand’s financial architecture, with more than 3.3 million members and over $123 billion under management. Bringing an entire generation into the scheme from birth would further embed participation as the norm, strengthen long-term investing and deepen New Zealand’s domestic savings pool.
In that sense, the policy speaks to a real structural challenge: too many New Zealanders arrive in mid-life with modest balances and patchy contribution histories, at a time when retirement costs and longevity pressures continue to rise.
We’ve been here before - and there are lessons to learn
New Zealand has, in effect, tested a similar idea already. When KiwiSaver began in 2007, new members received a $1000 Government “kickstart”. That incentive helped drive rapid uptake, but it was removed in Budget 2015 as fiscal costs climbed, and questions grew about value for money.
That history doesn’t mean the idea of a child booster is flawed – but it does also tell us something important: a simple one-off payment, on its own, is unlikely to deliver lasting behavioural change.
International experience reinforces the point. The UK’s Child Trust Fund scheme successfully created accounts and seeded them with government payments, but engagement was uneven: families on lower incomes were less likely to add their own contributions. Later, as those children became adults, a large share did not claim matured accounts, with significant sums sitting unclaimed.
The lesson isn’t that these schemes fail. It’s that automatic enrolment alone is not enough. Without engagement, education and contribution incentives, participation can become passive rather than transformational.
The real challenge: accounts without engagement
The biggest challenge in a “KiwiSaver from birth” model is not the concept – it’s execution.
If parents don’t contribute and families disengage for 18 years, the policy risks becoming a passive transfer that compounds quietly but doesn’t build the saving habit it’s meant to encourage. The risk is creating hundreds of thousands of passive accounts rather than a generation of active savers.
That risk is highest precisely where policy should be doing the most good: among households under the most financial pressure, where voluntary contributions are hardest and retirement outcomes are already weaker.
None of this is an argument against enrolling children early. It’s an argument for ensuring early enrolment is paired with education, incentives and ongoing engagement, rather than relying on a one-off payment and hoping compounding alone does the job, as is the statistic that the number of children in KiwiSaver has almost halved in the past decade – falling from 368,079 under-17s in June 2015 to 169,409 in June 2025.
If we’re going to start KiwiSaver at birth, we should also start money conversations at school.
Encouragingly, New Zealand is already making progress on financial education. The refreshed curriculum now gives schools clearer pathways to teach money skills, supported by new Financial Education Implementation Guides developed by Te Ara Ahunga Ora Retirement Commission in partnership with the Ministry of Education.
That work is being reinforced by programmes such as Sorted in Schools – a free, government-funded initiative aligned to the New Zealand Curriculum - which is already widely used, with more than 78% of secondary schools signed up.
If policymakers want to build a true “KiwiSaver Generation”, early-life KiwiSaver settings should be paired with high-quality, age-appropriate financial education. That combination would help ensure young New Zealanders are not just enrolled, but equipped to make confident, informed decisions over a lifetime.
Who pays – and who misses out?
With family financial support for first-home buyers estimated at $22.6 billion (effectively New Zealand’s fifth-largest owner-occupier lender), it’s not surprising child endowment ideas are resurfacing as a way to level the wealth-building starting line.
There’s also an unavoidable fiscal conversation. New Zealand registered 57,705 births in the year ended December 2025. A $1000 contribution per child implies a baseline cost of around $58 million a year, before administration or any future enhancements. That’s not an argument against the idea – it’s simply the price tag that needs an honest funding plan.
Any government dollar can only be spent once and a policy like this inevitably competes with other priorities – from improving outcomes in health and education to investing in the basics that lift opportunities for every child.
If a policy like this were funded by reducing or redirecting existing KiwiSaver incentives for adults, it would raise legitimate equity questions. What about people without children? What about lower-income workers who rely heavily on existing KiwiSaver incentives to build retirement savings? Those questions matter – because shifting incentives from adults to children creates clear winners and losers, and risks weakening support for groups already struggling to save.
Stability and fairness have always been central to KiwiSaver’s success. Frequent or poorly targeted changes can undermine confidence and long-term planning – the very behaviours KiwiSaver is designed to encourage.
Compulsion is the bigger lever – and it deserves equal attention
It’s also important to keep perspective. If the goal is materially improving retirement outcomes across the population, compulsory KiwiSaver with higher contribution rates remains the most powerful and proven lever available.
Internationally, compulsory or near-compulsory retirement saving systems consistently produce materially larger retirement balances (like in Australia, Sweden, Switzerland and the Netherlands) than voluntary systems alone.
This is something Peters has argued for previously – and it deserves serious consideration. We already know higher contribution rates make a substantial difference. Modelling has found that lifting default employee and employer contribution settings could result in retirement funds lasting around 30% longer for median earners who contribute consistently over a full working life.
In that context, enrolling children at birth should be seen as complementary, not a substitute. Getting people into KiwiSaver matters – but how much they contribute, and how their money is invested over decades, matters far more than the initial $1000. We made the broader case for KiwiSaver reform, including compulsory contributions and higher default rates, in this column back in September.
A KiwiSaver from birth policy should also specify where that money is invested. Default KiwiSaver funds must be balanced, but with decades ahead, the bigger risk can be being too conservative – which is why a growth-tilted or life-cycle default (with an easy opt-down) deserves serious consideration.
What a better-designed child booster could look like
If New Zealand is serious about KiwiSaver from birth, the design should focus on outcomes rather than optics. That could include:
- Targeted early life incentives, rather than a flat universal payment, to concentrate support where additional saving is least likely to occur.
- Matched contributions in the early years, encouraging parents to engage while children are young.
- Practical financial education, building confidence and capability alongside the account itself.
- Clear ownership transitions, so accounts don’t become forgotten or orphaned as children grow up – a risk seen overseas.
- Long-term stability, so families can plan with confidence across decades.
Done well, a child booster could strengthen KiwiSaver and future-proof retirement outcomes. Done poorly, it risks being expensive, blunt and politically fragile.
A healthy debate to have – now, not later
There is genuine merit in the idea that every New Zealander should enter adulthood already part of the retirement savings system, with time and compounding on their side.
But as with KiwiSaver more broadly, success will depend less on slogans and more on design. The challenge is not whether to start earlier – it’s how to ensure early enrolment actually leads to better long-term outcomes, and does so in a way that is fair, sustainable and stable.
This proposal should spark a broader debate about how we strengthen KiwiSaver for the next generation – alongside, not instead of, reforms such as higher and potentially compulsory contribution rates.
Big ideas are welcome. In retirement policy, though, it’s the detail that determines whether good intentions translate into lasting financial security.
Generate is a New Zealand-owned KiwiSaver and Managed Fund provider managing over $9 billion on behalf of more than 190,000 New Zealanders.
This article is intended for general information only and should not be considered financial advice. The views expressed are those of the author. All investments carry risk, and past performance is not indicative of future results.
To see Generate’s Financial Advice Provider Disclosure Statement or Product Disclosure Statement, go to www.generatewealth.co.nz/advertising-disclosures/. The issuer is Generate Investment Management Limited.