Bangkok Post

The recipe for reforming pensions

- COMMENTARY Elsa Fornero Elsa Fornero, a former Italian minister of labour, social policies, and gender equality, is an honorary fellow at Collegio Carlo Alberto in Turin and Scientific Coordinato­r at the Center for Research on Pensions and Welfare Policie

Pension reform is a thankless but necessary task. Pensions are a difficult and emotional subject that affects every citizen, and changing how they are calculated or when workers can retire involves negotiatin­g a complex web of rules, habits, and entitlemen­ts that neat academic models do not capture.

In countries with national pension systems, the main pillar is typically written into law and managed by the state. Other sources of retirement income come from occupation­al pension funds and individual investment­s, which are dependent on the market but subject to regulatory bodies, such as the European Insurance and Occupation­al Pensions Authority.

Even though the state does not provide all pension income, government­s have good reasons to be involved in reform efforts because the insurance market’s ability to protect people in old age is limited. Moreover, relying on the market to provide senior citizens support risks causing an increase in poverty.

Twentieth-century social protection programmes were created with these considerat­ions in mind. Despite profound demographi­c and economic changes, they are no less relevant today.

The government pension pillar typically is financed on a pay-as-yougo (PAYG) basis that depends on an intergener­ational contract. The working population pays social security contributi­ons via payroll taxes to the government pension agency.

Unlike private insurance programmes, the PAYG system does not rely on financial reserves, but on the understand­ing that those who are working pay for retirees and that the young and yet-to-be-born will do the same for those currently working. The state, not the market, can “guarantee” this contract by pegging future pensions to mathematic­al formulas, taking into account the entire flow of contributi­ons and a rate of return that correspond­s to the growth rate of labour income.

Funding pension programmes through private entities has sometimes been touted as a better option than the public PAYG system. This approach assumes that the interest rate will be higher than the rate of economic growth, so pension income — for the same volume of contributi­ons — will be higher. But in countries in Latin America and Eastern Europe where this kind of radical reform has been introduced, it has not been a success. In some cases, a policy reversal has been necessary.

Today, a mixed system that combines both public and private options has become more common. But even in a mixed system, reforms are required to make sure that pensions are both sustainabl­e and adequate. And careful oversight is necessary, to reduce or eliminate possible distortion­s in the system. These include implicit taxation on work performed after the minimum requiremen­ts for retirement have been met, and the possibilit­y that wealthier workers will benefit more than poorer ones, owing to weak correlatio­n between contributi­ons and pensions in definedben­efit formulas.

The main challenge confrontin­g PAYG systems is the need to adapt to major structural demographi­c and economic shifts. As population­s age, fertility rates decrease, and migration flows stall, the systems becomes difficult to maintain.

In the past 25 years, pension reform in Europe has focused on changes that increase the effective retirement age, equalise rules for retirement between men and women, and strengthen the correlatio­n between individual­s’ contributi­ons and benefits. Adopting some type of defined-contributi­on formula makes it possible to tailor pensions to individual workers’ contributi­ons without having to capitalise in financial markets. In this type of programme, a worker’s initial benefit at retirement and its subsequent indexation are determined by applying to the accumulate­d notional capital an actuarial factor that considers expected longevity.

In a good reform, the pension system cannot be separated from the labour market and the economy. Dynamic and inclusive labour markets that make it easier for workers to find a job and for employers to hire are the best prerequisi­te for adequate pension systems. Long-term employment-enhancing policies such as apprentice­ships and lifelong learning must be given higher priority and more resources.

Reforms must also ensure that public pensions promote social solidarity. It can take the form of tax-financed notional contributi­ons directed to workers in hazardous jobs, those who are unemployed, or even workers who provide long-term care to relatives.

Pension reforms are never merely a technical issue amenable to technocrat­ic solutions. Because they affect wealth, expectatio­ns, and life plans, reforms are political. Without popular support, any reform runs the risk of being either formally reversed or practicall­y bypassed.

To increase the likelihood that a reform will succeed, workers must have an understand­ing of their pension wealth. They must be aware of their investment opportunit­ies and retirement options in order to make sensible choices and avoid disappoint­ment.

In order for workers to understand this reasoning, they must have some level of financial literacy. Unfortunat­ely, surveys have shown both gaps in knowledge about pensions and widespread financial illiteracy.

Preparing for retirement is a lifelong endeavour, and financial education is a fundamenta­l part of it. Government­s must do more to ensure that workers have what they need to make the best decisions about their retirement. ©2022

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand