Why your credit card might offer you less generous rewards

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. 123RF

Credit card reward schemes are predicted to continue to become less generous, as the Commerce Commission clamps down on card fees.

Since 1 December, domestic Visa and Mastercard payments have been subject to new caps on interchange fees, which are paid to the card issuer for each credit or debit card transaction processed. Caps for foreign-issued cards come in next May.

It is the second stage of changes to the rules for these fees. The first step, in 2022, led to a reduction in credit card rewards schemes and this latest move is already having similar effects.

BNZ said it had reviewed its credit card rewards programme to ensure it was sustainable under the new interchange fee caps. Customers will have to collect more points to redeem rewards.

From 3 February, its cashback rate drops from $1.28 per 200 points to 94c.

Kiwibank also dropped its Airpoints partnership this year. It said increased costs and changes to the interchange fee regulations affected the value and viability of the reward programme.

“The alternative to closing the products would be to reduce the rate at which points are earned or to pass on increased costs through higher interest rates – options we believe are neither fair nor in customers’ best interests, as it would mean that customers who do not repay their balance in full every month would further subsidise rewards for those who do,” said Kiwibank’s chief customer officer of retail, Mark Stephen.

Claire Matthews, a banking expert at Massey University, said she expected more pressure to come on credit card rewards.

“The rewards have to be paid for from somewhere, and the interchange fees have been the primary source – to an extent, the rewards were a reimbursement of a portion of those fees to cardholders. If the fees are lower, the funds available to cover the cost of rewards will be lower, and therefore the rewards have to be reduced.”

David Cunningham, chief executive of Squirrel and former chief executive of The Co-Operative Bank, said the biggest problem with credit cards was that interest rates were still high and had not moved a lot compared to the OCR.

“Those who pay off their balance every month are subsidised by those who don’t. The best option is a low-rate card if you use it as a debt instrument, but those cards don’t have rewards.

“Having a low-rate card if you don’t pay off your balance, or a rewards card if you do pay off your balance, is the best option. Sometimes you have both – one for each purpose.”

Consumer NZ said its analysis showed that credit card reward schemes were only benefiting big spenders who used their cards frequently and paid off the balance in full every month.

“People would generally need to spend $25,000 on their cards over two years, and not pay interest on it, to make a rewards scheme worth the fees that the cards charged.

“Low spenders, and those with interest-bearing debt, don’t benefit from rewards and are effectively subsidising high spenders. We don’t think this is fair, so we have supported the regulation of interchange, knowing this would likely result in card issuers scaling back rewards programmes, increasing card fees or cancelling schemes altogether,” a spokesperson said.

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Australia beat England by eight wickets in second Ashes test, lead series 2-0

Source: Radio New Zealand

Australia beat England by eight wickets in the second Ashes test in Brisbane on day four on Sunday to take a 2-0 lead in the five-match series.

Australia, who won the series-opener in Perth by eight wickets, need only draw the next test in Adelaide to retain the urn.

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Joe Root and Ben Stokes DAVE HUNT

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Walking 144 kilometres in impeccable vintage

Source: Radio New Zealand

Artist Jacqui Madelin is walking 12km a day to raise money for Project Island Song, a pest-free wildlife sanctuary spanning seven islands in the eastern Bay of Islands.

But there’s a twist, Madelin is completing each day’s walk, for the first 12 days in December, dressed head-to-toe in pieces from her extensive vintage wardrobe.

One outfit is an Edwardian swimming suit, she says.

Jacqui Madelin has been walking 12 kilometres every day to fundraise for Project Island Song, a charity working on pest eradication in the Bay of Islands.

Supplied

Return of the tie

“It’s a navy blue, all-in-one with a sailor collar that goes down to the elbow, goes down to the knees and has a skirt to button over it.

“So you unbutton the skirt and dash into the sea before anyone sees your legs and then you come back out again and quickly button the skirt around your middle,” she told RNZ Nights.

While to top is vintage, she went for more practical options on her feet.

“I don’t normally walk that far so I figured it would be crazy to wear fancy shoes. My feet would expire on day one, so I have some hiking boots that are pretty elderly.

“They’re leather and I bought them on Trade Me for not very much but they’re very, very comfortable.

“So, from mid-calf upwards I’m extremely fancy and from mid-calf downwards it’s all practical.”

Another outfit getting an airing in her charity walk is a navy and pink suit from the 1940s that she had to do considerable remedial work on, she says.

“It was being sold with pieces of the skirt apparently and possibly for use only as a pattern so I thought, well, it didn’t cost much so I bought it and it had over 200 moth holes in it

“But other than that it was in really good condition so I just spent evening after evening after evening darning hole after hole after hole and when I finally finished I went into the fabric upcycle and I got the expert darning lady in there to see if she could spot all my darns and she spotted some from the first couple of days and after that I’d got better.”

Her cause is Project Island Song, a group of 267 volunteers working to clear seven offshore islands of pests

“They’ve cleared all of the introduced animal pests from seven of our offshore islands and are now working on the introduced plant pests and slowly they’re reintroducing species that are endangered elsewhere and some of them haven’t been seen in the Bay of Islands for over 100 years.”

Once a month volunteers visit the islands with pest detection dogs to make sure that no, rats or stoats have swum across, she says.

“I think it’s amazing, absolutely amazing what largely volunteer labour can do on the smell of an oily rag.”

Donations can be made on Project Island Song’s 12ks of Christmas on Givealittle page.

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Suzanne Vega after Covid: ‘A very tempestuous time to be alive’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Folk-rock luminary Suzanne Vega, now 66, has just released her first album in eleven years, Flying with Angels.

New York has yet to recover from the Covid lockdowns, she tells RNZ’s Sunday Mornings.

Singer/songerwriter Suzanne Vega performs at RNZ’s Auckland studio, Tuesday 7th Auckland 2018

RNZ/Luke McPake

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Kiwi Daniel Hillier shares sixth place at Australian Golf Open in Melbourne

Source: Radio New Zealand

Daniel Hillier. GIUSEPPE CACACE

Danish golfer Rasmus Neergaard-Peterson has claimed the Australian Open, winning by just one shot over home favourite Cam Smith.

Kiwi Daniel Hillier shared sixth place with rising Spanish golfer Jose Luis Ballester.

Neergaard-Peterson, 26, carded a final-round 70 to prevail in a tight finish at Royal Melbourne.

Smith was denied a maiden title with a bogey on the last hole, while Neergaard-Peterson sank an impressive up-and-down putt to secure victory.

Hillier came within touching distance of the leaders during his final found, sitting just two shots back on the 16th.

The Kiwi unleashed four birdies in his Sunday round and looked poised for a strong payday, but a double-bogey on the 18th proved costly.

He had started the day in sixth, four shots off the lead, and finished five back on 71.

New Zealand’s Ryan Fox was further down the leaderboard in 14th.

– RNZ

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Four injured after vehicle hits tree in Whatatutu

Source: Radio New Zealand

Four patients were transferred to Gisborne Hospital. St John

File photo.

Four people have been taken to Gisborne Hospital, after a vehicle crashed into a tree in Whatatutu.

Police said they were notified of single vehicle crash on Mangamaia Road at about 3.40pm Sunday.

The crash occurred on private property, with police on site reporting the vehicle hit a tree.

St John said two patients in a moderate condition and two patients in a minor condition were transferred to Gisborne Hospital.

Four ambulance vehicles responded to the crash.

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Government urged to ditch second military-style boot camp

Source: Radio New Zealand

The facility for the government’s military style academy pilot for youth offenders in Palmerston North. RNZ / Rachel Helyer-Donaldson

The Green Party is calling on the government to abandon boot camps, after ‘Scrutiny Week’ questioning revealed another intake of the controversial programme is planned for early next year.

During their appearances at Parliament’s Scrutiny Week committees, Minister for Children Karen Chhour and Oranga Tamariki officials were asked if they would move forward with another boot camp or military-style academy (MSA), before the law making it a sentencing option was passed.

The minister denied decisions had been made, but officials later said another camp with a new design was planned for the early new year.

Oranga Tamariki confirmed to RNZ it planned to run a further voluntary programme in March 2026.

The Responding to Serious Youth Offending Amendment Bill, introduced in November last year, would give judges the sentencing option of a MSA for repeat serious offenders.

The discrepancy between the minister’s statements and those of officials was “what Scrutiny Week is actually about – digging into what ministers and officials are saying, compared to what they are doing, and this was a big red flag”, Green Party MP Kahurangi Carter said.

Green Party MP Kahurangi Carter. VNP / Phil Smith

While passing the legislation may take another six months, job vacancies for the next iteration of the MSA were already advertised, she said.

Carter accused the government of putting the cart before the horse.

“We have a minister and ministry officials saying there are no definite decisions being made, but they are actively recruiting before legislation is in place.”

The “tough on crime” rhetoric came amid rising poverty, hefty cuts to community programmes working with youth and other policies affecting vulnerable families, she said.

“We’ve got a government who is pushing through with cancelling emergency housing, cancelling access to emergency food parcels and bringing in benefit sanctions. All of these things are key indicators of outcomes for children.”

The minister was using young people as a political football to push a tough-on-crime rhetoric, Carter said.

The next boot camp appeared to have been devised without strong evidence on the success of the pilot.

The minister had “cherry-picked” information from the independent evaluation and Carter believed another review was pending.

“My understanding is that the review has been commissioned, but they’re moving forward without it being complete, which just looks like one failed boot camp experiment to the next, without legislation, without making the changes that are needed, without investing in the communities and the people who have been doing this mahi for decades.”

The move also conflicted with the wishes of survivors of abuse in care and recommendations of the Abuse in Care Royal Commission, Carter said.

The Green Party wanted to see the plan ditched in favour of more funding for programmes that worked with young people in their communities. Boot camps were a failed experiment, she said.

“History has shown us – like in the royal commission of inquiry – that doesn’t work. What works is wrapping support around those kids and making sure we’re taking a holistic view of their lives.

“That’s where things like housing, poverty, having food on the table, education, vocational training, comes into it – where [there are] opportunities for them to participate fully in society.

A ministry evaluation of MSAs held in 2009 and 2010, and sent to Oranga Tamariki staff in March 2024, before the pilot programme, underscored many of the same criticisms found in the independent evaluation of last year’s pilot.

The earlier camps were found to have insufficient screening of staff and participants, lack of clarity around roles, inadequate information, training and resources, and required better engagement with whānau and a need to involve iwi services.

Minister for Children Karen Chhour. VNP / Phil Smith

The evaluation of last year’s pilot noted “meaningful and positive change” for the young people, but named challenges like rushed implementation, challenging transitions, a lack of continuity around therapeutic support, a lack of capacity in the residential phase, the need to engage with mana whenua earlier and belated support for whānau.

It also found the pilot was too small to provide any meaningful data.

During the pilot, participants ran away, one was kicked out of the programme and another was killed in a three-vehicle crash. Seven of the 10 young men involved re-offended, according to Oranga Tamariki.

Critics said the government was recycling old failures, pushing ahead with an already failed model, but Oranga Tamariki said it had integrated lessons from the earlier programmes.

Groups, including Save the Children, the Law Society and the Children’s Commissioner, have urged the government to abandon the scheme.

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Biosecurity puts Aucklanders on alert for yellow-legged hornets, as more are found

Source: Radio New Zealand

More yellow-legged hornets are being found in Auckland. Biosecurity NZ

Biosecurity New Zealand urges Aucklanders to be on the lookout for yellow-legged hornets or nests, as numbers of the pest keep climbing.

Thirty-three Queen Hornets have so far been found in the Glenfield and Birkdale areas of the North Shore – two more since Friday – 21 with developed nests or signs of nests.

Biosecurity NZ north commissioner Mike Inglis said the hornets had not spread yet from Glenfield and Birkdale.

Officials have put up signs within one kilometre of where the hornets were initially found, including in the suburb of Milford, alerting people to the invasive insect.

Biosecurity NZ north commissioner Mike Inglis. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

Inglis said that was just to raise awareness of the issue, rather than to signal the hornets had spread.

“All we are doing is continuing to engage the public, get some signage up.

“If you spot one, take a picture of it – if it’s a nest, take a picture of it. Don’t disturb it, contact our hotline and our expert staff will be out to deal with it.”

Inglis said teams had set more than 617 traps to eradicate the invasive insects, which were nearly twice the size of the common wasp and could wipe out bee colonies.

Trapping has already been extended out to 5km from the hornet detections, with a combination of carbohydrate and protein traps.

Inglis said staff would consult the technical advisory group overseeing the issue over extending further.

The insect traps hanging from trees around some locations in Auckland. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

He said tracking technology from the Netherlands had arrived, which focused on worker hornets and tracked those hornets back to the nest.

There were signs of worker hornets operating and more were likely to appear over the next 4-6 weeks, he said.

“We’ll start to find some worker hornets as well, in terms of they’re going out and building a secondary nest, they go foraging generally within the same area.”

He said Biosecurity NZ had received more than 4860 messages from the public so far about the hornets.

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Man charged with murder after Mt Wellington stabbing

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police cordon off the scene on Harris Road, Mt Wellington, after launching a homicide investigation. RNZ / Felix Walton

A 21-year-old man has been charged with murder, after the death of a man in the Auckland suburb of Mt Wellington on Friday.

The injured man turned up at a medical centre on Lunn Avenue with critical stabbing wounds.

He died in hospital. Police said he had earlier been involved in a fight.

One man faces murder and other charges, and will appear in court tomorrow.

Police are still looking for others they believe were involved.

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Measles outbreak: Auckland bars included in new locations of interest

Source: Radio New Zealand

Several locations of interest are located on Karangahape Road in central Auckland. Google Maps

Several new locations of interest in the spread of measles have been identified – including two central Auckland bars – and anybody who may have been exposed is asked to urgently contact Healthline.

There were no new cases of measles reported over the weekend, but Health New Zealand is concerned about several new locations, where people are considered close contacts and are at higher risk of infection.

The new locations include two bars on Karangahape Road in central Auckland and several Queenstown retail outlets:

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