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The retirees who can't spend

A retiree sits on a comfortable balance, takes only the minimum drawdown from an account-based pension, and frets about money anyway. Ask why they don't spend more and the answer comes back in the language of caution. What if I live longer than expected? What if the market turns? What if I need care? The fear is understandable. The odd thing is how often it persists in people who, on any sober reckoning, have more than enough.

What the rules can explain

In Australia, some of that caution is rational, and it traces straight back to the Age Pension. The pension is means-tested. For many asset-tested part-pensioners the binding constraint is the assets test, which reduces the payment by three dollars a fortnight for every thousand dollars of assessable assets above the threshold, though Centrelink also applies an income test and pays whichever produces the lower amount. Run those assets down and the pension rises to fill part of the gap. So the system, perversely, nudges those retirees toward spending rather than holding on. Yet the deeper instinct to preserve the balance does not bend to that arithmetic, and from inside the Australian system the rational and the instinctive are often difficult to disentangle.

By comparison, New Zealand lets you pull them apart.

Across the Tasman, the state pension works in a completely different way. Called NZ Super, it is universal. It is paid at a flat rate to almost everyone over 65, regardless of income, savings, or the value of the home. There is no asset test and no income test. A retired millionaire and a retiree with nothing receive the same fortnightly payment, and whatever you draw from your own savings has no effect on it at all.

That design strips out the one part of the puzzle that policy can explain. In New Zealand there is no means test to respond to, rationally or otherwise. If means-testing was the real driver of underspending, New Zealanders, free of it, should spend their savings more readily than Australians.

They don't.

What the rules cannot explain

New Zealanders who reach retirement with money behind them are still strikingly reluctant to touch it, and the country's Retirement Commission has put numbers to the spending aversion. Its Older People's Voices research, surveying more than 1,400 people aged 65 and over, found the bulk of older people with assets were still reluctant to crack open the nest egg. Most chose to spend only the returns or to keep growing their investments, and only one in ten drew a regular income from their savings at all. The Commission's own diagnosis was that people struggle to make the shift from a saving mindset to a spending one.

A fair objection is that New Zealand has its own quirks. Housing dominates household wealth there, as it does in Australia, and the wish to leave something for the children is just as common. Neither explains the pattern away, because each has a close Australian counterpart. What New Zealand removes, and Australia cannot, is the means test. Take that away and the reluctance remains. The New Zealand evidence does not prove the case on its own, but it strongly suggests the hesitation runs deeper than any pension rule.

Think about what society asks of a good saver. For decades they delay gratification. The dutiful saver watches a balance grow and learns, correctly, to avoid spending it down. Every year of working life rewards the instinct to add to retirement savings, not subtract. The discipline carrying someone safely to retirement is built entirely around not spending. Then, on a single notional day, we expect them to reverse the habit of a lifetime and start drawing the money down. The muscle that built the balance is the one we now ask them to relax, and it does not relax on command.

What the Australian numbers do and don't say

How big is the Australian version of this? The honest answer is that the figure is contested, and it pays to be precise about why. Treasury and the researchers measuring total wealth are counting one thing; super funds discussing account balances are counting another. Treasury's Retirement Income Review in 2020 found most people die with the bulk of the wealth they had at retirement still intact, and that most drew their superannuation at close to the minimum rate. A separate 2017 study by Asher and colleagues, later cited by the Grattan Institute, found the median pensioner died still holding around 90% of the wealth with which they were first observed. Super fund bodies push back, noting that most people have little super left late in life.

Both pictures can be true. Super balances naturally run down with age, while total net worth, dominated by the family home and other assets, is preserved or even grows. Measure super alone and you see depletion. Measure the whole balance sheet and you see wealth retained rather than spent.

The legislated minimum drawdown does not help, because it is widely misread. For a retiree aged 65 to 74 the minimum is 5% of the account balance a year, rising with age. Many treat the figure as a recommended income. It is nothing of the kind. It is a floor, the least you must withdraw to keep the account's tax concessions, set to stop super being used purely as a shelter. Drawing the minimum and no more is not a spending plan. For many it is a way of not spending while staying inside the rules.

None of this dismisses the fears driving the caution. People do not know how long they will live, what their health will cost, or what markets will do in the years they most depend on them. Wanting to leave something for children, especially children facing their own housing pressures, is a decent impulse rather than a mistake. Some retirees do draw down with confidence, usually those with a lifetime annuity or a clear spending rule that gives them permission. They are the exception. For most, the response to uncertainty is to freeze, and the freeze tends to outrun the actual risk by a wide margin.

What does this mean for someone near the end of their working life? Mostly, it means seeing the reluctance for the habit it is. The instinct that built your retirement is a poor guide to enjoying it. Saving and spending pull on opposite muscles, and the discipline you trained for decades will quietly resist being switched off. It is not a verdict on what you can afford. The hard part of retirement was never building the money. It is giving yourself permission to spend it.

 

Joseph Darby is a financial adviser and chief executive of Become Wealth, a New Zealand financial advisory and investment management firm. The views expressed are the author’s own. Nothing in this article constitutes personalised tax or financial advice.

 

  •   1 July 2026
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12 Comments
Diana
July 02, 2026

I think many people who have managed and built reasonable super balances are people who have reined in their expenditure and controlled their wants. By the time they retire, they do not want more stuff, especially if retirement has meant shifting house. This teaches to need to have less stuff. In addition, thinking about value for money before committing to expenditure is a great way to save money for the future. Then, if you have 'too much', give it to needy charities.

7
Stephen
July 02, 2026

Yes Kim that is definitely the big unknown (cost of aged care, when needed and for how long.) My mum has just entered age care and the RAD was $665,000 (Dad passed 5 years earlier.) We funded it from sale of her house.

In Australia unless you are well versed across all the superannuation, age pension and age care rules, OR you have a trusted adviser who is, most people are not equipped to work out what they can reasonably afford to spend in retirement. Instead most people play it safe and spend less for fear of running out.

6
lyn
July 02, 2026

Apart from cost of aged care and preserving for that, think it's the ingrained discipline of saving that never goes after 50yrs of prudence & perhaps particularly for current retirees being children of parents who went through shortages during & after WW2 so brought up to make do & mend, not throw anything away in case can be re-purposed, eg. colour TV in about 1975, bought colour when B & W gave up ghost in 1982, that TV worked until digital came in 2012 when had to change to digital.


5
Chris Jankowski
July 02, 2026

There are other objective reasons why retirees do not all spend that much.
These are long established households. Most of them own their houses. They already have too much furniture, kitchen gadgets, tools, shoes and clothes. etc. They hardly need more.
The kids are typically independent.
Then, all work related expenses are gone too. Travel to work. Trendy clothes, etc.
Once they age they also have less energy for sports and travel.
No extensive partying either.
No need to keep up appearance and buy a new car ever two years.
As a result, it is easier for retirees to live quite comfortably on smaller budget.

5
Peter Harvey
July 02, 2026

What Australia needs is the government (via the Future Fund) to sell a lifetime (of either the husband or wife) inflation adjusted pension. That takes the risk of a company going broke out of the equation. The gives certainty of not outliving your money. That protects me and wife. I'd be happy to live with the downsize of dying early and not having an inheritance for the kids from that pool of money.

3
Tom R
July 02, 2026

What! Give control of your money to politicians? Not on your life.

9
Peter.C
July 02, 2026

Unfortunately, the future fund is only there to fund the government’s responsibilities for the retirement of Commonwealth workers not anyone else or anything else.tax the gas industry properly and use that to fund something.

1
Francis H
July 02, 2026

Retirees have a bit more sense than Treasury boffins. As we have seen over the years with Budget changes to wealth creation a retiree must also add the risk of Governments changing the rules constantly. With aged care costs, removal of aged based rebates to private health insurance , rising health costs and market risk a retiree is well advised to be careful with spending. Nobody knows how long they will live. Also nobody can rely on the aged pension always being available. There are predictions that the American Social Security fund will run dry in 6 years and future pensioners there are being warned that they will be paid lower pensions . The same could happen here and in New Zealand.

3
Martin
July 02, 2026

Inflation today is diminishing wealth before withdrawing a pension. At current rates wealth is halved in 17 years, maybe sooner if it continues to rise. It's difficult to maintain value after withdrawing a minimum pension after inflation takes its toll. To me that is the greatest incentive not to draw down more than the minimum.

3
Dudley
July 02, 2026

Where's the fun in spending? It's just unrewarding work with ongoing consequences.

The food is better at home. The cacophony mercifully absent.

Walk for groceries simultaneously provides exercise and makes spending on cars superfluous.

Travel by internet, imagination and reminiscence makes aerodromes and aeroplanes seem designed to torture - twice - once by physical presence and second by paying to be tortured.

Counting money is harmless fun. Growing money brings harmless games. The more, the merrier; until it becomes work.

How much of super disbursement account income (tax 0%) can currently be saved with minimal risk?
= (1 - ((1 + (1 - 0%) * 5.5%) / (1 + 4%) - 1) / 5.5%)
= 73.8%

How much can be spent?
= 5.5% * (1 - 73.8%) * 2 * 2100000
= $60,522 / y

Which happens to be close to the full Age Pension + real after tax cash flow from $499,000 full Age Pension Asset Test. The extra capital is redundant, presuming own a home.

2
John Sharples
July 02, 2026

Retirees will be happy to spend if the author of the article is willing to donate their funds.

1
 

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