Otago Daily Times

IRD delay in passing on KiwiSaver money spurs compo calls

- TAMSYN PARKER

AUCKLAND: Frustrated KiwiSaver members who have been left waiting up to 10 months for their KiwiSaver employer contributi­ons to be passed on by the Inland Revenue to providers say they should be compensate­d for missing out on investment returns.

But Inland Revenue says it is prioritisi­ng fixing the issues, which were caused by a switch to a new system in April, and it has yet to work through any potential compensati­on.

More than three million people belong to KiwiSaver and more than $70 billion is invested in the scheme. That means millions of dollars pass through the IRD every year from employers which make a contributi­on to KiwiSaver, employees themselves as well as selfemploy­ed members.

It can typically take up to three months for a contributi­on to move from the IRD to a KiwiSaver provider. But some are now reporting wait times of five monthsplus, meaning they are missing out on the returns the money could have been getting from being invested through their provider.

One woman who wished to remain anonymous said potentiall­y hundreds of staff at the company she worked for were still waiting for a January employer contributi­on to be passed on to their KiwiSaver schemes.

She said the company’s human resources person had been chasing up the issue every month since June but it had yet to be resolved.

‘‘As of midOctober we were still waiting, and our HR department were still chasing on our behalf, and had not been given any indication by IRD as to when the issue would be resolved.’’

The woman decided to take the matter into her own hands and raised a complaint directly with the IRD in late October. The money was finally passed on to her provider late last month.

The woman said she had now requested compensati­on for the 10 months of lost gains on her $400 employer contributi­on.

‘‘I have queried compensati­on for the loss of 10 months’ earnings . . . and they have apparently passed this on to the appropriat­e person for review.’’

She said it appeared from an email from a customer services officer at the IRD to the HR person, which was passed on to staff, that there were a number of affected employers.

The woman was spurred to contact the Herald after she read about another case in which a woman called Andrea waited up to six months to have her KiwiSaver employer contributi­on paid on to her provider.

The Herald was also contacted by others reporting the same issue.

Another woman, Carol, said she was also missing her employer contributi­on for March.

‘‘IRD have acknowledg­ed there is an issue but cannot give any timeframe when this will be corrected.

‘‘[I] can only assume it is related to the upgrade they did at Easter. I know of many others in the same situation but only after I have prompted them to check their KiwiSaver account. It is not something many people actually check.’’

Molly Callaghan said she only realised five months’ worth of her KiwiSaver contributi­ons had not been passed on when she checked her KiwiSaver provider account in late September.

‘‘I’m with Generate and they send through monthly updates, which I clicked on thinking I will have a quick look at what is happening, and then thought ‘what the hell is going on?’

Nothing has been going in there for months.’’

After calling her provider she was shocked to find they did not know anything was wrong.

‘‘I think that is the worst part — there does not seem to be any reconcilia­tion between the provider and the IRD, so if there is something gone missing, well, noone even knows about it. And I’m sure most people don’t regularly check their KiwiSaver — they just let it plod along.’’

Ms Callaghan said both she and her provider began contacting the IRD to try to find out where the money was but she felt she never received a satisfacto­ry response.

‘‘The only thing they continuall­y said was ‘I don’t know’.’’

Finally, she received an email on October 13 saying the money had gone to her provider. Ms Callaghan responded with a request for compensati­on.

She said as a business owner if she had been late paying money to the IRD she would be charged a fee.

Ms Callaghan said the IRD should have told people about the issue when it first started.

‘‘I think the IRD should be notifying people that something has gone wrong at the time — not hiding from it.’’

An Inland Revenue spokeswoma­n said most of the issues raised were because of glitches from the changeover to the new system in April this year.

‘‘Not everyone is affected the same way for the same reasons, and it’s taking time to diagnose and resolve. We’re working to get the money flowing and we’re making good progress.’’

She said the IRD could not say definitive­ly how far back the issue went or how many employers had been affected.

‘‘The work we’re currently doing will determine that.’’

Late last month she said the IRD could not answer the question of how many others might be affected without the query going through an Official Informatio­n Act request due to the amount of time and resources it would take to find that out.

That request is still under way. The spokeswoma­n said Inland Revenue did pay interest if it held on to contributi­ons, and the amount payable was legislated and was based on the market rates. But the rate went down to zero as of May 8.

‘‘Any potential compensati­on is something we have yet to work through because we’re concentrat­ing on the necessary system fix at the moment.’’

She said the IRD had been responding to customers who contacted it but as the problems were complicate­d and affected people in different ways for different reasons there had been no

‘‘blanket’’ communicat­ion.

But she said the IRD regularly communicat­ed with providers on matters affecting KiwiSaver contributi­ons.

She said KiwiSaver members could rest assured their contributi­ons would be passed on.

‘‘Inland Revenue understand­s some people may feel frustrated about the time it is taking to resolve this, and a lack of informatio­n about it, but we can assure them that when they contact us we will respond with as much explanatio­n as we can depending on their particular circumstan­ce.

‘‘This is a complicate­d situation affecting people in different ways, for different reasons. We’re always working to improve all aspects of our operation and this is no exception.’’

Consumer New Zealand head of research Jessica Wilson said the IRD should look at compensati­ng those affected.

‘‘Given the circumstan­ces, if the IRD system has caused significan­t delay in consumers getting their KiwiSaver contributi­ons passed through, we think it does really need to look at compensati­on.’’

She said if it was a small number of people affected it would be easier to work out on an individual basis. Otherwise, the IRD would have to look at the number affected, the amount of time it had been holding on to the money and potential interest on what people could have earned.

She said those worried they might also be affected should check their payslip and then check what was going into their KiwiSaver account.

‘‘Most people should be able to do that online or if they can’t [they should] call their KiwiSaver provider and check. If they think there is a discrepanc­y get in contact with IRD.’’

Ms Wilson said she would have expected the IRD to be a bit more proactive and let people know if they were affected and what was going on.

‘‘There might be people waiting for that money to come through so they can put a deposit on a house for example.’’ — The New Zealand Herald

 ?? PHOTO: GERARD O'BRIEN ?? The Wains Hotel renovation resulted in Mike Williams Decorator receiving three awards at the New Zealand Master Painter Awards.
PHOTO: GERARD O'BRIEN The Wains Hotel renovation resulted in Mike Williams Decorator receiving three awards at the New Zealand Master Painter Awards.
 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Molly Callaghan wants compensati­on from the Inland Revenue after she discovered her KiwiSaver contributi­ons had not been passed on to her provider for five months.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Molly Callaghan wants compensati­on from the Inland Revenue after she discovered her KiwiSaver contributi­ons had not been passed on to her provider for five months.

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