The Government reduced taxes promising to pay for revenue lost with expenditure cuts. This task is proving very difficult, especially in a recession that, along with the deficit, may be deeper by Christmas. In October, Treasury pointed to a higher than budget night deficit for 2023/24, and ACC was blamed for a good part of the deterioration:
The Government’s books sank further into the red in the year to June, partly thanks to higher personnel costs at Health New Zealand and soaring Accident Compensation Corporate (ACC) claims costs.
The Government’s operating balance before gains and losses (OBEGAL) deficit deepened by $3.4 billion in 2023/24 compared to the previous year, to $12.9b.
It was also $1.8b worse than the Treasury forecast at the Budget in May. “These are sobering numbers,” Finance Minister Nicola Willis said. “We need to tidy them up and we need to impose restraint.” Government’s $12.9b (operating balance before gains and losses) deficit .
Roughly speaking ACC’s current levies and investment earnings are enough to pay for 2023/24 year’s claims. Yet we are told, ACC books plunge $7.2b into deficit as state insurer proposes hiking levies. ACC’s ‘deficit’ was largely driven by an $8.7b increase in the expected future costs of injury claims already on ACC’s books.
This ‘unfunded liability’ has many moving parts in its calculation (aka a best guess fed by assumptions that change from time to time). Fancy actuarial calculations reflect that each client is different, with different lifespans and requirements for earnings-related compensation, rehabilitation, medical care. Law and ACC expert Warren Forster warns that panic is unnecessary as the deficit is bound to bounce around in response to a multitude of these factors.
ACC is also arguing that the number, complexity and cost of long-term accidents has risen. It has also lost a court action and will have to honour compensation claims arising from historic sex abuse cases. ACC says it will need an extra $3.6 billion to prefund this obligation. This $3.6 billion explains part of ACC’s $7.2 billion deficit.
Bizarrely, the CEO of ACC claims that rises in levies are necessary so that we don’t impose the burden on future generations.
Chief executive Megan Main said the proposed changes in levies, and reclassification of some industry and sports activities, were needed to ensure future generations were not carrying the cost of current claims.
If we pay higher levies to fully fund these old sexual abuse claims, the current generation carry the burden that logically belonged to generations back years ago. If these legacy claims are, in essence, an expansion of the role of ACC, why not pay their costs out of general tax revenue as they arise?
ACC is now 50 years old, but it’s only been in recent times (since 2014) that full-funding has been achieved. While private insurance should be funded to cover all future liabilities for existing claims to protect claimants were the insurer to go bankrupt, ACC is not private insurance and does not need full-funding. With nearly $50 billion in the fund and the back-up of the state’s power to tax, going bankrupt is not even a remote possibility, As discussed previously, the architect of the scheme, Sir Owen Woodhouse saw ACC as a social insurance scheme not as dressed up private insurance. All that is needed is a buffer of reserves for the years when there might be natural disasters or natural fluctuatons. Now, it seems, decades’ old claims that are newly under the ACC umbrella must also be prefunded. This stricture also makes it very difficult to expand ACC in ways that are sensible in the 21st century.
We apply full funding only in this narrow area of social security. For example, those currently retired did not pay into such a fund, and their NZ Super is funded out of current taxes.
It might be helpful to understand this better if we tried to make an estimate of the future liabilities of NZ Super. You would look at the numbers of superannuitants in each age band, (65-100+ years) take account of their average expected probability of being alive in one year’s time, and then another year’s time and so on, to determine the super bill for that cohort for each year until they were all dead. You would need to know the rate of super (married, single, single sharing) for each person, how the rates are projected to increase over time, and then translate future payments into today’s dollars.
If your head is hurting, so is mine. I asked an actuary friend for a stab at a ballpark figure for today’s unfunded NZS future liability. For the current population of those over 65 the estimate is $280 billion. That is the size of the fund we would need today for NZ Super to be “fully funded” for current retirees. It does not include the accrued liabilities for those under 65 and those New Zealanders living overseas who might come back to New Zealand for their retirement. The question is Why on earth would you ever want to cripple the economy to put aside this sum? Instead of ACC’s $50 billion fund we might have invested in better hospitals and rehabilitation and accident prevention, just saying,
Returning to the current issue- should the proposed ACC levies go ahead? Some of what is proposed are tweaks to the different levies for different categories of business or activity to better reflect so called ‘risk’. Bizarrely, as noted ballet dancers have been singled out for enormous leaps in levies. But motor cyclists and e-vehicles are also seen as fair game. The reliance on such a complex risk-related system is the actual problem here.
The ACC asked for feedback and received 8,700 written submissions. About 75% related to the motor-vehicle proposals with 94% against the proposed changes to the motor vehicle account, and 90% against increasing motorcycle owners’ contribution.
But the most worrying increases are for employees. It is proposed that the current non-work levy for earners (including GST) of 1.6% today, will rise over the next three years to 1.83%. As discussed previously in The Daily Blog, we do not need ACC levy increases, the ACC levy is regressive with no offset as in Australia with Medicare for low income people. It is a tax by any other name and increasing it will be contractionary even if it makes government’s books look better.
Susan St John – Yes, the Government are reviewing how ACC is working due to this concern.
They are reviewing ACC to see if they can cook the books and sell it off to one of their corporate mates .Like they are trying to justify selling Kiwi Bank so that we have 5 overseas owned banks .Their witch hunt on banks making a profit is not going too well as they are finding out that they are only making 12% ROI .Luxons former employers would have demanded that or higher hence the reason he no longer works for them perhaps .
@ nathan- This- government- isn’t- that- and- you- know- it. – This- gooberment- couldn’t- review- a- plucked- chicken- because- if- the- natzo- gooberment- went- full- review- it’d- end- up- with- a- view- up- its- own- arse-hole-.
Oh, wait…?
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/530416/decision-to-remove-luxon-artwork-from-trade-me-weird-artist
Where’s chippy by the way? The entire labour party for that matter? Are they still all wrapped up in roger douglas’s neo-liberalism? Of course they are, silly me.
Farmers. Maori. Go on strike for twelve months then see what dead things fall from the rafters. –
Chiiiiiiiipy ? Chiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiipy….? Where are you? –
Killer white T-Cell – Perhaps.
Sex abuse is not an accident so should not be covered by ACC .
Neither is being deliberately hit by a car. Should that be unfunded too? How about a sport injury. That’s self inflicted as it wouldn’t have happened if you didn’t play?… See where in going with this?… The victims of crime like the mosque attack? Or are you suggesting the victims of sex abuse asked for it? … I could go on but I think iv’e proved my point.
Sex abuse has always been funded by Acc .
It is only recently It has been disputed by right wing governments.
That’s like saying a pot hole isn’t an accident so you shouldn’t be covered by ACC if you fall into it.
This may advise.
ACC covers you if you’ve suffering from depression or other mental harm because you’ve been sexually abused. You don’t have to have suffered any physical injury, but to get the full range of ACC assistance you must have a diagnosed mental injury, like depression or post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Sexual abuse: Cover for resulting mental harm – Community Law
Community Law
https://communitylaw.org.nz › community-law-manual
Last time nats were in government they went down the same path which failed badly and was an embarassment all round .These clowns are hell bent on failing badly just look at the ferry joke .The new warves were being future proofed for when the big quake comes .70 meter deep piles dont come cheap for a start .Clearly Willis thinks a polystyrene floating dock will do the job .Mind you her skoda boats might be ok tying up there .
Yes Gordon and people forget so easily. Judith Collins was minister for ACC at one time and she turned it from a not for profit organisation into a highly profitable one. How might you say? Her edict to case workers was first and foremost find that any injury suffered was a “pre-existing injury” and therefore not covered.
Collins and National have history of corruption.
I agree with Gordon and you over this.
If injury is caused by the deliberate action of yourself or another it is not an accident so you are both right.
Maybe we need to go back to the days of allowing people to sue.
Thats fraught as well because as usual the wealthy whitey will immediately have a 90% advantage.
Maybe instead of tax cuts we could put that money into the legal aid system especially so poor people can sue or as well the current ACC levy’s could be tagged to a person like Kiwi Saver to be used for either your defense or your prosecution.
I have always been intrigued as to how medical misadventure is covered in many cases by ACC when generally they are caused by a careless or wrong action by medical professionals.
As for professional sports such as Rugby their coverage should be at the expense of their sports.
IMO too many professional sports people get preference over those of us who injure ourselves and wait days or weeks for scans while these blokes get same day service.
My BiL was knocked off his motorbike by some drunken fool in a car and almost killed. If he hadn’t had the very latest in crèche helmets at the time, he would have died. He was very grateful for ACC, because brain damage prevented him from working for quite some time, and the liquid in the car of course had absolutely zero money – so suing doesn’t work. Even if you’re suing a large company they usually have far more resources than the average man in the street. How much money has Alex Jones paid out to the victims of his lies? It just won’t work.
ACC separates the compensation and treatment from the cause of the accident and whose fault it was. An individual cant sue for damages but that does not mean there is no case taken against the wrongdoers with possible criminal conviction and fines.