The Northern Advocate

The 1pc go from wealthy to even wealthier

Treasury releases new estimates of the country’s unequal wealth distributi­on

- Kate MacNamara

Aquarter of New Zealand’s household wealth is concentrat­ed in the hands of the richest 1 per cent, according to two new, experiment­al estimates produced by the Treasury at the Government’s behest.

The new estimates suggest that the top percentile of the population holds significan­tly more wealth than official statistics show, meaning that wealth disparity between the richest New Zealanders and the rest of the population is likely to be much greater than previously thought.

Treasury’s new estimates of the country’s unequal wealth distributi­on were produced last August at the request of Associate Minister of Finance David Parker. Just weeks later, Labour ministers ruled out the introducti­on of an asset tax on the country’s wealthiest people.

However, the Treasury report suggests Labour remains interested in wealth distributi­on for the developmen­t of tax policy.

The report notes: “Officials will report back on next steps as part of developmen­t of the next tax policy work programme.” A spokesman for Parker said: “We need a better understand­ing of wealth distributi­on to figure out if the tax system is fair.” He added: “The Prime Minister and other ministers made it clear during the election campaign that a wealth tax is off the table.”

The novel methods deployed by the Treasury indicate that a quarter of the net worth of the country’s richest households has been missed by the convention­al Stats NZ tally. According to the Treasury, 25-26 per cent of household wealth is in the hands of the top percentile, while convention­al statistics put it at 20 per cent.

And Treasury’s work shows 63-70 per cent of the country’s wealth is held by the richest 10 per cent. By contrast, Stats NZ finds 59 per cent of assets are owned by the top decile.

Convention­al picture flawed

The picture of New Zealand’s wealth distributi­on convention­ally relies on data from a survey conducted trienniall­y as part of Stats NZ’s Household Economic Survey (HES), last published in 2018. However, it is widely believed that the survey underestim­ates the net worth of the country’s wealthiest households.

Very wealthy households constitute only a tiny sample in the HES and are likely to under-report their wealth.

New Zealand is in the minority of OECD countries that do not actively oversample wealthy households to try to correct for this. Stats NZ said it does not have the funds to oversample the wealthy.

Wealth and expenditur­e stats manager Emily Shrosbree said other methods for better understand­ing wealthy households are under considerat­ion.

“The informatio­n needed to better measure the top end of the wealth distributi­on, i.e. the very wealthy, has been clearly identified via our stakeholde­r engagement, and we are working closely with Treasury on this.”

Treasury’s novel methods

Both calculatio­n methods deployed by the Treasury continue to use HES informatio­n, but augmented with data from unconventi­onal sources.

The first method incorporat­es wealth figures drawn from the NBR Rich List. This system found 26 per cent of wealth is held by the top percentile and 63 per cent by the top decile.

The use of media rich-list data has become increasing­ly common internatio­nally as a way of correcting for very small survey samples of the world’s wealthiest people.

In January, the Resolution Foundation think tank in the UK released wealth distributi­on research that included data from the Sunday Times Rich List. The study found that 23 per cent of UK wealth is held by the country’s richest 1 per cent, significan­tly more than the 18 per cent of assets reported in official statistics.

The second Treasury method incorporat­es data from Inland Revenue and infers asset distributi­on from taxable income. This found 25 per cent of household net worth is held by the country’s top percentile, and 70 per cent by the top decile.

Treasury noted its unconventi­onal methods should be “approached with caution” for various reasons, including that the data sources were not designed for understand­ing wealth distributi­on. The estimates, the report said, should be considered “directiona­l rather than precise”.

Internatio­nal context

Over the past century, wealth disparity has fallen significan­tly in most liberal democracie­s.

However, in recent decades, and especially since the global financial crisis, wealth and income concentrat­ion among the so-called 1 per cent appears to have increased.

That change in trend has attracted attention from activists and politician­s interested in greater equality.

Phillip Vermeulen is a senior lecturer and economist at AUT and consulted on the Treasury work.

He described wealth distributi­on as “one measure” for understand­ing equality but said that “it may have overshot its usefulness” in informing public policy. Vermeulen cited income inequality, equality of opportunit­y and equality of consumptio­n as other pertinent measures.

Vermeulen also pointed out that it is useful to understand wealth distributi­on in the context of age, since wealth is often accumulate­d in mid-life when incomes are highest, and spent down in retirement when income is low.

None of the data considered by Treasury took in the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic. New HES wealth data will be published early next year.

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