NZers $60,000 richer
The latest Spicers Household Savings Index looks good on the surface, but not so good when you dig into the details.
Wednesday, March 16th 2005, 6:09AM
Household balance sheets appear healthy. The net worth of the average household has risen almost $60,000 during the past two years.
But are we financially prepared for retirement? Treasury research suggests that we are, although many would disagree. A comparison between New Zealand household balance sheets and those in Australia shows that Australians are significantly better prepared.
Australians earn more and are therefore able to save a bigger proportion of their pay. New Zealanders have consistently spent more than they earned in the last 15 years. Australians have only recently started to live beyond their means, Rozanna Wozniak says.
“Most Australians also belong to a compulsory workplace savings scheme with an employer contribution. International research suggests that while such schemes provide some substitute for other savings, savings overall still rise.”
“The danger for New Zealanders is that they mistakenly assume that the New Zealand Superannuation Fund will provide the same security in retirement as the Australian scheme with individual accounts.”
Wozniak says it is unlikely that the workplace savings scheme under consideration by the Government will result in a significant increase in savings. There is no financial incentive to remain in the proposed scheme and no restrictions on withdrawing after the initial lock-in period. The temptation to spend their money will be too great. (For more on this read www.supertalk.co.nz)
The Spicers Household Savings Indicators show household wealth increased by 2.4% in the December quarter even though the rate of increase in debt (3.7%) outpaced the growth in asset values (2.7%).
Wozniak says households are still relaxed about leveraging their housing gains of the last few years. Although the pace of housing appreciation has slowed since the highs of 2003, the pace of growth in debt picked up last quarter even after the seasonal impact of the Christmas spending binge was removed.
Homeowners still showed the largest gains in net wealth, although the gap between the pace of growth in financial assets and housing assets narrowed.
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