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The Need of Intergenerational Equilibrium: Going Beyond Parametric Adjustments within Pension Systems in Europe Marek Góra Warsaw School of Economics AARP and European Centre, Dürnstein, October 2008 Economic and social background for traditional pension systems as well as the systems themselves originate from distant past. Since that time population structure passed not only quantitative but also deep qualitative change. Quantitative-parametric adjustments within pension systems, although needed, are insufficient given the scale of the change. Ageing in OECD countries Demographic (low fertility, high longevity) as well as policy driven processes (early retirement) led to a situation in which in 2004 average man in OECD countries drew a pension for 18 years and average women for 23 years, while in 1970 that numbers were 11 for men and 14 for women. In OECD countries one person aged over 65 is per five people aged 20 to 65 years. In 2050 there will be one per two. This process is strongly advanced mostly in Europe and in Japan. Demographic transition b i r t h a n d d e a t h r a t e s Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4 Birth Rate Population Death Rate 1700s p o p u l a t i o n Demographic Growth 1800s 1900s 2000s GDP divided between generations GDPR _______ GDP 1 A B opt. (?) opt. (?) C2 C1 0 time What shall be changed to bring pension systems back to reality? Country specific response to that questions „Wealth trap” The pension system (macro perspective) The pension system is a way of dividing current GDP between a part kept by the working generation and a part allocated to the retired generation. GDP GDP W GDP R If GDPR/GDP = const. economic neutrality (production factors remuneration not affected) Proportions of the division are subject to public choice. The pension system (micro perspective) From the individual perspective, the pension system is a way of income allocation over life cycle. In the activity period individuals buy pension rights; after retirement they sell the rights. If PV(C) = E[PV(B)] actuarial neutrality (decisions on income allocation over life-cycle not affected) The pension system is an institutional framework for intergenerational exchange. The system should aim at balancing of interests of the retired and the working part of population. In the pension system there are only those who pay contributions and those who receive benefits. Irrespective to its particular design, the retired consume a part of GDP produced by the working generation. The pension problem we face is not the problem of the scale of GDP but the problem of how to divide current GDP between pensions and remuneration of production factors (I leave out other transferres). As long as pensions are related to wages -- even if economic growth were strong -- the pension problem stays unsolved. By the way, growth will not be strong if production factors are not remunerated adequatly to their productivity. Financial sustainability of pension systems can be improved by: Increasing retirement age; Increasing labour participation in working age; Reducing indexation of benefits; Increasing the contribution rate or taxes (???) Rationalisation is needed but insufficient. Even if it is implemented at a substantial scale it should be followed by a systemic reform. 11 In the past the key goal of pension system was old-age poverty alleviation. Now this goal is still important but it can be reached more efficiently via the budget, while publicly or privately run universal pension systems’ goal is providing people with a method of income allocation over life cycle. At the macro level that leads to intergenerational equilibrium. Intergenerational equilibrium if: GDPR/GDP = constant (macro perspective) PV(c) = E[PV(b)] (micro perspective) GDP2 GDP1 T1 R1 GDP1 T2 R2 A pension reform can mean: Implementation of a mechanism that generates pension rights, hence also sets pension expectations at the level that can be maintained without an increase of burden put on the next generation; Channelling flows of contributions through financial markets in a way that generates positive externalities for GDP growth; In the system based on individual accounts pension rights are constantly valuated, hence automatically adjusted. Individual accounts let design the pension system in a way that interests of the workers and the retirees is equally valued. Such pension system – being still dependent on demography – can work in any given demographic situation. If the system individualises participation then the role left for the state is regulation and supervision. Pension systems can be divided into two classes: public (universal, mandatory), in which the need to decide is limited but at the same time responsibility for future outcomes of that decision is spread over the entire population; Private (non-universal, voluntary, additional), in which individual decisions are crucial and responsibility for their outcomes is on individual participants. The above should not be confused with public or private management of systems. Key objective for pension reform is to reduce ex ante pension expectations expressed in relative terms. The only other option is to adjust pensions ex post, which means reduction of pension levels in absolute terms. Four dimentions of discussion on pension systems: Key objective (redistribution vs. income allocation) Coverage (universal/public vs. group/private) Management of the system (public vs. private firms) Financing method (financial markets vs. real economy) A universal system can be perceived as and called a public scheme, while non-universal schemes can be called private. This classification of systems does not imply public/private ownership of institutions running pension systems. In particular a private firm can manage a part of the public pension system. This is a special case of the publicprivate partnership implemented within social security – but not privatisation of the system. Contrary, the private sector enters social security taking a role in providing people with social security. If redistribution is finance via the budget then: Broader redistribution base; Social needs can be better addressed (adjustability); Pension system becomes transparent. Traditional pension system is typically kept within an etatistic framework. Pension system based on individual accounts extended by budgetary discretional interventions is closer to the principle of subsidiarity. Traditional pension system focuses on the retirees while the system based on individual accounts balances interests of retirees and the interest of the working generation. Funding (FDC) is not a solution to pension system problems. Funding is just a useful method pushing the system towards intergenerational equilibrium. We can achieve the same goal not using financial markets (NDC). Both approaches have advantages and disadvantages. We can apply a combination of the two. A deep systemic pension reform is inevitable since the Ponzi game is over. The sooner the reform is implemented the lower its economic and social cost. Individual accounts instead of traditional anonymous system is a change of method – not giving up the social goals of the system. Key features of the Polish approach Focusing on the mandatory part of the pension system; Separation of OA and NOA; Termination of the OA part of the previous system; Creation of entirely new OA pension system based on saving in the activity period and insurance after retirement; Splitting each OA contribution between two individual retirement accounts per person; Annuitisation of account values at the moment of retirement; Minimum pension supplement on the top of both annuities if their sum is below certain level (paid out of the state budget). Two DC arrangements Two pension arrangements dominate discussions on pension reforms: Non-financial (notional) Defined Contribution (NDC) – individual accounts not using financial markets, generating rate of return equal GDP growth rate; Financial Defined Contribution (FDC) – individual accounts using financial markets, generating rate of return determined in the markets. Two Accounts: Similarities and Differences NDC and FDC are almost identical from both individual and macro perspective. NDC and FDC are managed differently and different are possible positive externalities they generate. Neither NDC nor FDC plays any redistributive role Contributions before and after the reform Total NDC individual account FDC individual account Other parts of the system -- -- before 1 Jan 1999 Social security contribution 36.59 -- after 31 Dec 1998 OA contribution 19.52 12.22 7.3 -- NOA contribution 17.07 -- -- 17.07 Phaising-in New system (people born after 31 Dec. 1948) People born after 31 Dec. 1968 People born before 1 Jan. 1969 Automatically covered Automatically covered by the new system; OA by the new system; OA contribution contribution either automatically split split between two between two accounts accounts or paid into [NDC+FDC] one account [(NDC+FDC) or NDC] Old system (people born before 1 Jan. 1949) Stay in the old system (no possibility to switch for the new one); no accounts The choice made by those born after 1948 was kept within the new system and did not really affect their future pensions Public-Private Partnership Pension reform was not privatisation of social security Entire OA pension system stays public. Its part is just privately managed. The remaining part of the system could and should also be privately managed – which would not change the nature of the system itself. Implementation of pension funds was a part of the method applied, not the goal of the reform. Projection of pension expenditure 2004 Belgium Czech Republik Denmark Germany Estonia Grece Spain France Ireland Italy Cyprus Latvia Lithuania Luxemburg Hungary Malta Netherlands Austria Poland Portugal Slovenia Slovakia Finland Sweden UK 2025 10.4 8.5 9.5 11.4 6.7 n.a. 8.6 12.8 4.7 14.2 6.9 6.8 6.7 10.0 10.4 7.4 7.7 13.4 13.9 11.1 11.0 7.2 10.7 10.6 6.6 2050 13.4 8.9 12.0 11.6 5.1 n.a. 10.4 14.0 7.2 14.4 10.8 5.3 7.6 13.7 13.0 10.0 9.7 13.5 9.5 15.0 13.3 7.3 13.5 10.7 7.3 15.5 14.0 12.8 13.1 4.2 n.a. 15.7 14.8 11.1 14.7 19.8 5.6 8.6 17.4 17.1 7.0 11.2 12.2 8.0 20.8 18.3 9.0 13.7 11.2 8.6 Δ(2050-2004) 5.1 5.6 3.3 1.7 -2.5 n.a. 7.1 2.0 6.4 0.4 12.9 -1.2 1.8 7.4 6.7 -0.4 3.5 -1.2 -5.9 9.7 7.3 1.8 3.1 0.6 2.0 Countries marked according to level of expenditure: green – low and/or decreasing yellow – intermediate purple – high and/or increasing. Poverty risk by age EU25 EU15 Belgium Bulgaria Croatia Denmark Germany Estonia Ireland Greece Spain France Italy Cyprus Latvia Lithuania Luxemburg Hungary Malta Netherlands Austria Poland Portugal Romania Slovenia Slovakia Finland Sweden UK 0-15 20b 20b 19 22b 18 10 13 21 22 19 24 14 24 12 21 27 20 19 22 16 15 29 24 25 9c 18 10 8 22c 16-24 21b 21b 17 20b 12 29 14 18 19 23 18 18 23 12 19 23 15 17 11 16 13 26 20 22 11c 17 22 23 18c 25-49 14b 14b 11 14b 11 10 12 16 14 15 16 11 16 10 17 19 13 14 13 10 11 21 17 16 8c 14 8 8 13c 50-65 13b 13b 11 10b 6 5 13 18 20 18 17 10 15 14 20 18 8 10 13 8 10 16 18 13 9c 8 9 5 16c 65+ (18b)19 (19b)20 21 16b 5 18 15 20 33 28 29 16 23 51 21 17 7 6 15 5 14 7 28 17 19c 7 18 11 24c