* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download 184 kb PowerPoint presentation
Financialization wikipedia , lookup
Beta (finance) wikipedia , lookup
Moral hazard wikipedia , lookup
Investment fund wikipedia , lookup
Stock selection criterion wikipedia , lookup
Stock valuation wikipedia , lookup
Financial economics wikipedia , lookup
Modern portfolio theory wikipedia , lookup
Investment management wikipedia , lookup
Issues in Group vs. Individual Provision Lawrence Thompson Senior Fellow The Urban Institute 1 Outline 1. 2. Objectives of a pension system Role and structure of different pillars in a multi-pillar system 3. Issues affecting design of second pillar: a) Structure and size of other components b) Distribution of system risks c) Degree of worker choice d) Operating costs 4. Concluding Observations • 2 Objectives of a National Pension System 1. Primary Objectives: a) Assure retired/disabled a minimum income b) Assure minimal degree of earnings replacement 2. Secondary Objectives: a) Increase national savings b) Promote financial market development c) Help restructure failing (state) enterprises d) Minimize adverse side effects e) Secure high returns on contributions 3 Three Common Elements (Pillars) of a Retirement Income System 1. Redistribution program(s) a. Defined benefit, pay-as-you-go, usually government operated 2. Mandatory earnings or contribution-related program(s) a. Defined benefit and/or defined contribution b. Pay-as-you-go and/or advance funded c. Government and/or private operation 3. Voluntary programs a. Advance funded, private operation b. Increasingly defined contribution c. Government oversight and subsidies 5 Issues Affecting Second Pillar Design: Size and Structure of Other Components 1. Level of minimum income guarantee – Establishes floor 2. Size of total mandatory component – Limits the size of the 2nd pillar 3. Structure of minimum income guarantee – Affects incentive structure – Also influences size of 2nd pillar 6 Level of Minimum: Ratio of Minimum Pension to Average Wage Austria 35% Netherlands 24% Belgium 40 Norway 34 Canada 24* Poland 33 Chile 25 Portugal 27 Denmark 31 Spain 27 France 42 Switzerland 18 Japan 23 United Kingdom 27 Kazakhstan 25 United States 22 35 year worker, 1997 * 29%, including income tested supplement 7 Structure of Minimum: Two Approaches 1. Fill the Gap – Acts as a supplement to top up a second component benefit – Found in Chile, Sweden, U.S. 2. Flat minimum – Provides floor that second component is built upon – Found in Russia, China, U.K., Netherlands, Denmark 8 Fill the Gap Minimum (Chile, U.S.) Minimum Pension Preretirement Earnings 9 Fill the Gap Minimum (Sweden) Preretirement Earnings 10 Flat Minimum Basic Pension Preretirement Earnings 11 Size of 2nd component also depends on structure of the minimum (Fill The Gap Minimum) Minimum Pension Earnings Related Pension 50% 25%25% Preretirement Earnings 12 Size of 2nd component also depends on structure of the minimum (Flat Minimum) 25% Basic Pension Preretirement Earnings 25% 13 Comparison of Approaches Flat grant: 1. Uniform coverage in dignified manner 2. Fewer disincentives (at least from benefit side!) 3. Less room for earnings-related component 4. More budget resources 5. Easier to administer • Fill the gap minimum: 1. Fewer budget resources to finance 2. More room for earnings-related component 3. More difficult to administer, particularly if means-tested 4. Compliance, savings and labor market disincentives 5. Contingent liabilities 14 Issues Affecting Second Pillar Design: Size and Distribution of System Risks 1. Of particular concern in pension programs: a. Few alternative income sources at point of eligibility b. Long lead time for individual supplementation 2. Major sources of risk a. Demographic b. Financial c. Political/Institutional 15 Demographic Risk Two elements: 1. Change in mortality among aged – Affects both funded and unfunded schemes 2. Change in birth rate (or net immigration) – Affects unfunded schemes directly through change in beneficiary/worker ratio – Affects funded schemes indirectly through changes in relative factor prices 16 Incidence of Unanticipated Demographic Change 1. Defined contribution scheme: – Impact entirely on retired worker 2. Defined benefit scheme: – Initial impact on plan sponsor (or state) – Ultimate impact likely to be shared between contributors and beneficiaries, at least initially 17 Financial Risk 1. 2. Of concern mainly in funded plans*. Two elements of financial risk: – Change in ratio of mean returns to mean wage growth rate – Variation in annual mean returns and growth rates around known mean * cost of unfunded plans can be sensitive to changes in real wage growth rate 18 Impact of Change in Mean Return and Wage Growth on Replacement Rate at Retirement Average Annual Wage Increase Average Net Investment Returns 1% 2% 3% 3% .42 .35 .30 4% .55 .46 .38 .32 5% .72 .59 .49 .41 .35 .77 .63 .52 .44 .82 .67 .56 6% 7% 4% 35 year work history; 10% contribution rate; 15 year annuity 5% 20 Impact of Variations around the Mean Analytical approach: 1. Examine impact of variation in wage growth, investment returns, and annuity interest rate 2. Monte Carlo experiment with actual mean and standard deviation of annual wage growth and annual average investment returns, 1953-95 3. Examine impact of four structures: a. Traditional defined benefit -- sponsor absorbs all risks b. TIAA model -- wages (and contributions) vary; sponsor smoothes other variations c. Swedish model -- wages and accumulation returns vary; sponsor smoothes annuity interest variation d. Chile model -- worker assumes all risks 21 Impact of Second Component Structure on Replacement Rate Variation, U.S. Data Mean Standard St Dev as Deviation % of Mean 1. Traditional Defined Benefit (sponsor absorbs all variation) .55 0 0% 2. TIAA Model (sponsor smoothes investment & annuity variation) .56 .05 9% 3. Swedish Model (sponsor smoothes annuity variation) .55 .21 38% 4. Chile Model (worker bears all risks) .57 .26 45% Portfolio of 50% equities and 50% 10 year government bonds; actual average returns 1953-95; 35 year work history; 10% contribution rate; 15 year annuity; administrative costs 1% of assets 22 International Comparison: Mean & Standard Deviation, Chile Model Country Mean Standard Deviation St Dev as % of Mean Germany .40 .15 37% Japan .25 .07 26% United Kingdom .38 .21 55% United States .57 .26 45% “World Fund*” .62 .25 40% Portfolio of 50% equities and 50% 10-year government bonds; Administrative costs of 1% (of assets) per year *international average of returns; U.S. wage growth 23 Incidence of Financial Market Risk 1. 2. Risk of change in mean growth or return rate: a. Defined contribution scheme: Risk born entirely by retiring worker b. Defined benefit scheme: – Initial impact on plan sponsor (or state plan) – Ultimate impact likely to be shared between contributors and beneficiaries Risk associated with variance in growth rates & returns: a. Defined benefit scheme: no risk b. Defined contribution scheme: – Risk born entirely by retiring worker – Size of risk depends on plan design 25 Political/Institutional Risks 1. 2. Unsustainable benefit promises Decision gridlock a. Cutting back defined benefits (France) b. Resolving fiscal imbalances (Argentina) 3. Benefit adjustments to meet budget targets 4. Asset mismanagement a. Political interference b. Private mismanagement / regulatory failure 5. Underestimated transition costs 26 Structure Affects Type of Political Risk Funded, Defined Contrib. PAYG, DB Public Private Public Management Management Management Unsustainable promises Decision Gridlock Asset Mismanagement Regulatory Failure Transition cost 27 Issues Affecting 2nd Pillar Design: Worker Choice 1. Type of choice: a. Portfolio composition b. Asset manager c. Plan managers 2. Reason for providing choice: a. Worker preferences b. Political insulation c. Improve quality of service 28 Issues Affecting 2nd Pillar Design: Administrative Costs 1. Reduce investment returns a. Limit (eliminate?) ability to lower contributions through advance funding 2. Vary with: a. Degree of individual choice b. Degree of centralization of administration c. Level of service offered 3. May serve as insurance against certain forms of political risk 29 Inflation Adjusted Market Returns, 1953-1995 Equity returns Bond Returns Mixed Portfolio Wage Growth 8.1% 3.8% 6.6% 5.0% 1.6% Germany 7.4 3.9 6.3 4.8 1.5% United Kingdom 7.8 1.8 5.6 3.6 2.0% United States 8.2 2.2 5.6 1.0 4.6% Japan Gap 30 Administrative Costs Under Different Models (Percent of Assets) Accumulation Total Australia 0.5 - 1.9 1.0 - 2.4 Latin America 0.6 - 1.4 1.1 - 1.9 Poland 0.8 – 1.0 ? UK – personal pensions 1.2 – 1.3 1.7 – 1.8 1.0 1.5 0.8 – 1.9 1.3 – 2.5 – stakeholder pensions US – 401(k) plans – mutual funds 1.4 – TIAA – thrift savings plan 0.3 0.1 ? Switzerland 0.4 Denmark 0.3 Sweden 0.2 – 0.4 ? 31 Second Pillar Model Variation 1. 2. 3. Defined benefit or defined contribution Advance funded or pay-as-you-go Centralization or decentralization of key functions a. Collecting contributions b. Keeping individual account records c. Paying benefits 4. Degree of worker choice 5. Type of political risk minimized 32 Comparative Strength of Different Funded Account Models The approaches 1. Latin American 2. United Kingdom 3. Switzerland 4. Sweden 5. Thrift plan 6. Singapore 7. (Canada) Political Insulation Worker Choice Low Cost 35 Concluding Observations I 1. 2. Risks in pension system: a. All models have risks, but nature and size varies from one model to another b. Some forms of financial risk are unique to defined contribution plans Individualization of pension provision: a. Increases financial risk (variation around the mean) b. Shifts more of demographic and financial risks to individual retired workers c. Tends to increase administrative costs d. Allows greater choice (to what end?) 37 Concluding Observations II 3. 4. Structure of second pillar influenced by: a. Relationship between minimum benefit and ceiling on mandated benefit b. Political traditions 1) Pattern of political risks in each society 2) Governance traditions c. Preferences for: 1) Providing choice in the mandatory system 2) Spreading risks among general population High administrative costs are: a. Either political insurance policy or (in part) dead weight loss b. Hard to reduce (costs are incomes) 38