It arrived again this week, dressed in slightly more expansive clothing than usual, when a reporter asked the Prime Minister whether he or his ministers had been aware that the Ministry of Social Development had established internal performance targets, effectively key performance indicators, designed to reduce access to emergency housing support.
Tama Potaka, the responsible minister, had claimed ignorance on Q+A when questioned by Jack Tame, and denied that he had any knowledge that such targets existed. Tames excellent line of questioning drew Potaka to suggest that a reasonable person might consider them a perverse incentive.
The reporter questioning Chris Luxon and Chris Bishop about the same issue during their Cabinet meeting standup on 29 June, also invited Luxon to either confirm or deny knowledge of a practice that his own minister had claimed ignorance about and appeared to have criticised, a policy that is the direct result of the National Party's anti-welfare policy direction.
Luxon's response deserves to be quoted in full, because the evasion contained within it is telling:
"Yeah look. I think my Ministers are there to set the direction. I think the CEO's are then asked to set the operations into motion. Ah! It's not surprising that there will be performance, criteria, you know, performance management criteria.
Ah! It's not just peculiar I imagine to just this one issue. There will be a range of considerations, or KPIs, or deliverables that would be expected, that a CEO would be holding a manager to account for. But ultimately it's an operational issue for MSD."
Get that. A Prime Minister, asked whether his government was aware that the welfare agency it oversees was operating new internal targets incentivising the reduction of emergency housing assistance to some of the country's most destitute people, responded by observing that it isn't surprising that performance management criteria exist, and then passed the buck entirely to the operational domain of MSD's chief executive.
In effect it's another evasive word salad from a floundering PM. Not a denial that such targets exist. Not a condemnation of them. Not a commitment to examine them. Merely a shrug performed in the language of corporate governance. Ministers set direction. CEOs set operations into motion. The homeless, apparently, don't deserve any consideration in that particular chain of responsibility at all.
The trouble with Luxon's answer, beyond its spectacular moral vacancy, is that it's also structurally dishonest. Ministers in New Zealand aren't merely the setters of broad strategic direction, insulated from the operational consequences of that direction as though by a firewall. They are constitutionally responsible for the conduct of their ministries, and the effects of their policies.
The doctrine of ministerial responsibility, one of the foundational principles of the Westminster system in which New Zealand's Parliament operates, holds that a minister is accountable for the actions of their ministry, whether or not they personally authorised each individual decision. This isn't a technicality. It is the mechanism by which democratic accountability flows from the bureaucracy to the elected government to the public.
What Luxon offered instead was a version of accountability so attenuated as to be meaningless: I am responsible for direction, but not for the consequences of that direction when those consequences prove politically inconvenient.
What makes the exchange additionally revealing is the Budget context in which these KPIs exist. The same Coalition of Chaos that Luxon apparently leads has legislated automation tools for MSD with a $55 million savings target already baked into the Budget forecasts before a single reassessment has taken place. That figure didn't arrive from nowhere. It was a political decision, made by the government of which Luxon is the head, about how much money would be taken out of welfare expenditure through the agency of a new assessment regime.
On 28 June 2026, 1News reported:
'Perverse Incentive': MSD Staff Metrics Include Emergency Housing Grants
Ministry of Social Development (MSD) managers are being individually assessed on whether they keep emergency housing numbers under the government's targets, and told they could face consequecnes if their performance across their KPIs does not meet expectations.
Multiple tiers of MSD staff are subject to annual performance agreements, according to internal documentation released under the Official Information Act.
The staff receive regular grading on eleven measures, including the number of people in their region who receive emergency housing grants. Managers are rated as either "exceeding", "achieving", or "needs improvement" on each metric.
"Where performance does not meet expectations, you will be required to develop and implement targeted improvement plans to address gaps and restore performance," the letter states.
When a ministry operates inside a funding envelope that has predetermined the savings to be made from reducing benefit access, the existence of internal KPIs calibrated toward exactly those reductions isn't, as Luxon would have it, a routine and unremarkable operational matter. It is the operational expression of a political objective. The direction was set. The operations followed the direction. The minister set the direction. That isn't MSD behaving autonomously. That is MSD doing what it was instructed to do
On 29 June 2026, Newstalk ZB posted:
MSD Incentive to Reduce Emergency Housing Needs to Go
Documents obtained under the Official Information Act show MSD managers are assessed on a range of performance measures, including reducing the number of people receiving emergency housing grants.
Staff are graded as "exceeding", "achieving" or "needs improvement", and the documents state that if performance doesn't meet expectations, an improvement plan can follow.
So we are grading people on whether they keep people out of emergency accommodation.
That should concern every New Zealander.
The Auckland City Mission says these targets create an incentive to say no.
The Christchurch Methodist Mission says nobody should ever be rewarded for denying someone a basic thing like shelter. Those are serious claims.
The overseas experience here is instructive, and deliberately ignored by those in power. In the United Kingdom, the Work Capability Assessment regime administered under successive governments through contracted providers including Atos Healthcare produced precisely the dynamic that Luxon is now normalising.
Upper Tribunal judges found the assessment reports unacceptably poor. Three judges ruled that the assessment framework systematically disadvantaged people with mental health conditions, learning disabilities, and autism. A High Court found the Department for Work and Pensions had launched its reform consultation without any disability or equality impact assessment, concealing from the public that civil servants had identified that 100,000 people would be pushed into poverty. Those internal documents only emerged through litigation.
Just like the documents that only surfaced through court-ordered discovery in Mike Smith's climate case, after Luxon's office had separately failed to disclose the same material in response to an OIA request, those internal DWP documents didn't emerge through ministerial transparency. They emerged through litigation brought by disability activist Ellen Clifford, because ministerial transparency is among the first casualties of dishonest governments.
In the United States, the lawsuit against UnitedHealth over its nH Predict algorithm has revealed a system in which an AI tool with a documented 90 percent error rate was used to override physicians' clinical decisions for elderly Medicare patients, and internal performance targets were set requiring employees to keep patient rehabilitation stays within one percent of the algorithm's projections. The company knew that only 0.2 percent of wrongly denied patients would ever file an appeal. The incentive structure was calibrated to that gap. It wasn't an operational aberration. It was operational design.
The government's willingness to present declining numbers as a success story, while internal KPIs were calibrated to produce exactly that decline regardless of genuine need, is the most revealing detail of the entire affair. The statistics don't tell you how many people were turned away from emergency housing because a manager's performance review depended on it. They don't tell you how many people are now sleeping rough while the spreadsheet looks tidy.
New Zealand is now building the infrastructure for an equivalent system to the overseas examples detailed above: legislated automation powers for MSD, an approved pool of government-selected and compliant doctors to replace treating physicians in eligibility assessments, a Budget savings target that predetermines the outcome, and a Prime Minister who has publicly committed to treating the consequences of all of that as an inconsequential matter for the chief executive.
Luxon's answer was a policy position, stated plainly and without embarrassment in the language of corporate management devoid of a soul. The disabled, the homeless, the New Zealanders who require emergency housing support, aren't constituents. They are line items. They are the savings target.
A reasonable person, as Tama Potaka himself suggested, might find that a perverse incentive. A Prime Minister who runs the government responsible for it responded by confirming it was routine, unremarkable, and not his problem.
That answer tells New Zealanders everything they need to know about Luxon: that the most vulnerable in this country are, to him, somebody else's operational problem.


















