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Fiscal Impacts of Korean Public Pension System: A Generational Accounting Approach Young Jun Chun University of Incheon, Korea January 2006 Motivation • High speed of Population Aging in Korea - Old population proportion: 7.2% (2000) → 23.1% (2030, OECD average) • Effects of population aging on Public Pensions budget - Increase in public pension benefits and contribution revenue decrease will deteriorate pension budgets → Increase in Fiscal Burden of future generations Motivation • Budgetary Imbalance of Public Pensions - Too generous public pension benefit promised compared with contribution Replacement Ratio: 60%(NPS), 70%(OCP) Contribution Rate: 9%(NPS), 17%(OCP) ※NPS: National Pension OCP: Occupational Pensions PCS: Pension for Civil Servants PPS: Pension for Private School Employees Motivation • Short History of Public Pensions - National Pension (NPS) was introduced in 1988. Regulatory Pension benefit will be paid from 2008 - Occupational Pensions (OCP) has longer history, but the proportion of Participants of OCP is small. Pension for Civil Servants (PCS): introduced in 1960 Pension for Private School Employees (PPS): introduced in 1972. → Large amount of contribution revenue without regulatory payment of NPS benefits results in accumulation of NPS funds. → Difficult to evaluate the fiscal impacts of public pension and intergenerational redistribution effects using cross-sectional distribution of pension contribution and benefits. Need a forward-looking approach: i.e. need to project contribution and benefit distribution by age for future years Purpose • Investigate financial sustainability of public pensions and their intergenerational redistributive Effects - Generational Accounting Approach to evaluate the effects of public pensions - Construct Projection Model for public pensions to compute the benefit and contribution distribution of future years Generational Accounts (GA) • Present value of net tax payment of representative individual of generations for remaining lifetime - Net tax: tax payment – transfer income D s 0 s t s t ( s t ) g N N G ( 1 r ) W t ,t s t ,t s s t Traditional Method of computing GA • Project aggregate values of Taxes and Benefits • Estimate age*sex distribution using micro-data • Allocate aggregates across age and sex in each year, based on the assumption that the age*sex distribution will not change • Compute PV of net payment for each cohort Modification of Method • Compute age*sex distribution of contributions and benefits in future years, using projection models, because the distribution changes overtime, as the NPS and other public pensions mature. Projection (NPS) • Use National Pension Corporation (NPC)’s 2000 projection of distribution of the covered population (participants), average income, new benefit recipients by age*sex*year. • Modify the distribution of participants and new benefit recipients using 2005 Population Projection of National Statistics Office (NS0). - Assume that the ratio of the number of participants and new benefit recipients by age*sex to the relevant population group is the same as that assumed in NPC’s projection ※ NPC’s projection used 1996 population projection • Modify average income and average benefit amount of new benefit recipients, by changing assumptions on macroeconomic variables • Compute contribution by age*sex, based on the assumption on participation rate, contribution collection rate, contribution rates. • Compute the pension benefit recipients by age*sex, taking account of demographic characteristics Projection Model (PCS, PPS) • Use data published statistical yearbook: - Statistical Yearbook for the PCS Statistical Yearbook for the PPS • Distribution of Participants by age*sex*duration of service - For benchmark year (2004), use data in the statistical yearbooks - After benchmark year, compute the distribution, using distribution of the newly employed, survival rate, retirement rate by age*sex computed using the data of the statistical yearbook Projection Model (PCS, PPS) • Wage by age*sex*duration of service - For benchmark year (2004), use data on wage by duration of service in the statistical yearbooks - After benchmark year, compute wage using the profile of benchmark year and the assumption that the wage growth rate is the same across age groups. • Distribution of benefit recipients - For benchmark year (2004), use data on the distribution by age in the statistical yearbooks - After benchmark year, compute new benefit recipients by age*duration of service using retirement rate computed using the statistical yearbook Projection Model (PCS, PPS) • Benefit Amounts - For benchmark year (2004), use the profile published in the statistical yearbook - After benchmark year, compute the benefit amount for new benefit recipients, and compute weighted average of benefit amount of the existing benefit recipients and the new benefit recipients • Compute contribution by age*sex, using distribution of participants, computed wage profile, and contribution rate Findings • Aggregate Contribution and Benefits - Aggregate Public Pension Benefits rise up to 17% of GDP in the long run. - Aggregate Public Pension Contribution Revenue does not exceed 4% of GDP - Pension budget turns deficit around 2015, and the magnitude of deficit reaches up to 13% of GDP, if current policy maintains. → Long-term budgetary imbalance • Public Pension benefit profile changes overtime. - The Profile becomes flatter as the NPS matures. Findings • Current Public Pension system substantially shifts its fiscal burden to future generations. - Net payments for all the current generations (alive in 2004) are negative - The accounts for future generations is positive and its magnitude is very large. • Generational Imbalance is more serious for the PCS and the PPS then for the NPS. - Fiscal burden shifted to future generations by the PCS (PPS) is 44.5 (8.4%) of that by the NPS, while the ratio of the number of the PCS (PPS) participants to that of the NPS is only 7.6% (18%). Findings • Net transfers from the public pensions are larger for male than for female, except for the young age groups of the PPS participants. - Korean public pensions covers the income earners and the proportion of the economically active population is larger for males. - The proportion of the female newly employed private school employee is much larger than the male. ※ number of newly employed (PPS) in 2004 male: 5,176 female: 13,303 Findings • The required contribution (and benefit) adjustment to attain long-term budgetary balance is very large. - Need to raise contribution rate by 127% of current rate, if adjust in 2010. - The tax increase is accompanied by the same percentage decrease in benefits, the required adjustment decreases to 36%. • The adjustment is delayed until 2020, the adjustment magnitude of contribution (and benefit) rise to 165%(41%) Findings • Changing the assumption on fertility rate, discount rate, and wage growth rate does not produce qualitatively different results • Rise in wage growth rate does not improve the public finance of the public pensions. - Rise in wage growth rate increases the magnitude of the required tax adjustment, because wage growth increases the benefit amounts. - The deficit of public pension become larger then the contribution revenue after 2030. Therefore, the wage growth raises the deficit. Summary • Current public pension policy in Korea is not sustainable, even though its current budget maintains surplus and the magnitude of pension fund is very large. - The annual budget of public pensions may cause fiscal illusion, which implies that forward-looking approaches are needed to evaluate the intergenerational redistribution Summary • Evaluation of intergenerational redistributions based on cross-sectional distributions may be misleading. - Need to separate age effects and cohort effects using panel studies. - In addition, forward-looking approaches are needed in order to take account of changing trend of economic behavior in economies that experience rapid transition.