Transition : Paying for a Shift from Pay-as-You-Go Financing to Funded Pensions
There is a widespread perception that public pension systems in richer countries are in crisis. As schemes mature and the population ages, the burden of financing pensions has grown and, on current policies, will rise much further. Developing count...
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Format: | Brief |
Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/01/6266699/transition-paying-shift-pay-as-you-go-financing-funded-pensions http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11242 |
Summary: | There is a widespread perception that
public pension systems in richer countries are in crisis. As
schemes mature and the population ages, the burden of
financing pensions has grown and, on current policies, will
rise much further. Developing countries are younger and
pension systems relatively immature. But the transformation
in demographics and pension benefits that took over a
century in richer nations is forecast to take less than 30
years in developing economies. The Bank has argued that a
'three-pillar' pension system can mitigate
emerging problems in developing countries' public
pension systems. The recommended system, set out in Averting
the Old Age Crisis consists of 'a publicly managed
system with mandatory participation and the limited goal of
reducing poverty among the old; a privately managed
mandatory savings system; and voluntary savings'. The
note compares funded and pay-as-you-go finance of retirement
incomes, highlighting the transition double burden, and,
stipulates size of the transition will depend on the
starting point: How generous is the current pay-as-you-go
pension promise? How mature is the pay-as-you-go pension
system? What is the age structure of the population?
Transition costs can be controlled by a number of policies:
Limiting the coverage of the funded program to new
labor-market entrants or younger workers spreads the
transition cost over a longer period; Scaling down existing
pay-as-you-go liabilities is likely to play an important
part in any fundamental pension reform; Governments can
share in any extra returns to the funded system and use them
to help pay for the transition cost. Countries have in
practice used a mix of strategies. The precise balance
between debt and budgetary finance (spending cuts or tax
increases) should be chosen in the general context of a
country's fiscal policy. |
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