6 Nov 11
More New Zealanders support raising the age of eligibility for NZ Super from 65 to 67 years old than oppose.
However, it is a close call when people are asked which of the main parties' KiwiSaver policies they support and whether or not the country should borrow to restart contributions to the New Zealand Superannuation Fund.
A November 1-6 RadioLIVE-HorizonPoll of 1,636 adult respondents finds
Weighted by age, gender, personal income, region, ethnicity and party vote 2008 to provide a representative sample of the New Zealand population, the survey's maximum margin of error at a 95% confidence level is +/- 2.4%.
SUMMARY
Major savings policies
SUPER AGE
44.8% support lifting the age of eligibility for NZ Super from 65 to
67, 34% oppose
KIWISAVER
There is a close call between National and Labour KiwiSaver policies.
35.3% of employers say they won't be able to afford contributions, increasing at 0.5% a year, from 3% to 7%a year over 9 years
37.5% say they can afford it
27.2% are not sure if they can afford it
RESTARTING CULLEN FUND CONTRIBUTIONS
Another near-even result:
It was explained that Labour would need to borrow the money to invest in the Cullen fund, though returns were expected to exceed borrowing costs.