Pension Reform in Hungary : A Preliminary Assessment

Hungary is entering the fourth year of a multi-pillar pension reform that has proved popular among workers despite initially lukewarm support from the government that succeeded the reforming government, and despite the poor initial performance of c...

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Main Authors: Rocha, Roberto, Vittas, Dimitri
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/07/1490137/pension-reform-hungary-preliminary-assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19596
id okr-10986-19596
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-195962021-04-23T14:03:43Z Pension Reform in Hungary : A Preliminary Assessment Rocha, Roberto Vittas, Dimitri ACCOUNTING ACCRUAL RATES ACCUMULATION PERIOD ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS AGING ANNUITY ANNUITY RATE ASSET MANAGER BENEFIT FORMULA CAPITAL MARKETS CONTRIBUTION RATE CONTRIBUTION RATES DEBT DEFICITS DEPENDENCY RATIO DISABILITY PENSIONS EMPLOYMENT EQUILIBRIUM EXPENDITURES FUNDED SYSTEMS GROSS WAGES INCOME INFLATION INFLATION RATES LABOR FORCE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION LEGISLATION LIFE EXPECTANCY LIFETIME EARNINGS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MARKET RISK MORTALITY MULTI- PILLAR SYSTEMS MULTI-PILLAR SYSTEM NET WAGE NEW ENTRANTS NORMAL RETIREMENT AGE OPERATING COSTS PAYROLL TAX PENALTIES PENSION FUND PENSION FUNDS PENSION INSURANCE PENSION REFORM PENSION SAVINGS PENSION SYSTEM PENSIONERS PILLAR BENEFIT POPULATION GROWTH PRICE INDEXATION PRIVATE PENSION PRIVATE PILLARS RETIREMENT RETIREMENT AGE RISK DIVERSIFICATION SUPERVISORY FRAMEWORK SWITCHING STRATEGY TAX TREATMENT UNEMPLOYMENT WAGE GROWTH Hungary is entering the fourth year of a multi-pillar pension reform that has proved popular among workers despite initially lukewarm support from the government that succeeded the reforming government, and despite the poor initial performance of capital markets because of Russia's crisis in 1998. Roughly half the labor force joined the new system voluntarily. Most who switched were younger than 40. Many people switched to the system because it offered more risk diversification. The pay-as-you-go (PAYG) system, which had been severely damaged by repeated manipulation of its parameters, clearly offered a low return on contributions. The new system is still predominantly PAYG. The first pillar accounts for more than two-thirds of the total contribution, but the new second pillar offers the chance of higher average returns on contributions. Most workers probably intuited the risk and returns inherent in a pure PAYG system and mixed system, including the capital market risk in the second pillar and the political risk in the PAYG pillar. The new system offers better prospects of long-run risk-adjustment returns for young workers, and most young workers effectively opted for the new system. But the new system was probably oversold as well, making older workers - who would be better off staying in the reformed PAYG system - switch too. The government has so far decided not to increase the contribution to the second pillar from 6 to 8 percent, as originally planned, so efficiency gains in labor and capital markets may also be smaller than expected. Addressing projected deficits in the PAYG system may require further adjustments, such as delaying the retirement age and shifting to indexed prices, reducing net benefits to future generations. Reform has sharply reduced the severe initial bias against future generation but hasn't eliminated it altogether. The voluntary switching strategy achieves the same outcome as a forced switch based on an arbitrarily cutoff age, while preventing legal problems and contributing to the reduction of the implicit pension debt. But it leaves a few individuals worse of the if they'd chosen their best option - a problem a well-designed public information campaign can reduce. 2014-08-21T19:54:00Z 2014-08-21T19:54:00Z 2001-07 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/07/1490137/pension-reform-hungary-preliminary-assessment http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19596 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2631 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research Europe and Central Asia Hungary
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACCOUNTING
ACCRUAL RATES
ACCUMULATION PERIOD
ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS
AGING
ANNUITY
ANNUITY RATE
ASSET MANAGER
BENEFIT FORMULA
CAPITAL MARKETS
CONTRIBUTION RATE
CONTRIBUTION RATES
DEBT
DEFICITS
DEPENDENCY RATIO
DISABILITY PENSIONS
EMPLOYMENT
EQUILIBRIUM
EXPENDITURES
FUNDED SYSTEMS
GROSS WAGES
INCOME
INFLATION
INFLATION RATES
LABOR FORCE
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
LEGISLATION
LIFE EXPECTANCY
LIFETIME EARNINGS
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
MARKET RISK
MORTALITY
MULTI- PILLAR SYSTEMS
MULTI-PILLAR SYSTEM
NET WAGE
NEW ENTRANTS
NORMAL RETIREMENT AGE
OPERATING COSTS
PAYROLL TAX
PENALTIES
PENSION FUND
PENSION FUNDS
PENSION INSURANCE
PENSION REFORM
PENSION SAVINGS
PENSION SYSTEM
PENSIONERS
PILLAR BENEFIT
POPULATION GROWTH
PRICE INDEXATION
PRIVATE PENSION
PRIVATE PILLARS
RETIREMENT
RETIREMENT AGE
RISK DIVERSIFICATION
SUPERVISORY FRAMEWORK
SWITCHING STRATEGY
TAX TREATMENT
UNEMPLOYMENT
WAGE GROWTH
spellingShingle ACCOUNTING
ACCRUAL RATES
ACCUMULATION PERIOD
ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS
AGING
ANNUITY
ANNUITY RATE
ASSET MANAGER
BENEFIT FORMULA
CAPITAL MARKETS
CONTRIBUTION RATE
CONTRIBUTION RATES
DEBT
DEFICITS
DEPENDENCY RATIO
DISABILITY PENSIONS
EMPLOYMENT
EQUILIBRIUM
EXPENDITURES
FUNDED SYSTEMS
GROSS WAGES
INCOME
INFLATION
INFLATION RATES
LABOR FORCE
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
LEGISLATION
LIFE EXPECTANCY
LIFETIME EARNINGS
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
MARKET RISK
MORTALITY
MULTI- PILLAR SYSTEMS
MULTI-PILLAR SYSTEM
NET WAGE
NEW ENTRANTS
NORMAL RETIREMENT AGE
OPERATING COSTS
PAYROLL TAX
PENALTIES
PENSION FUND
PENSION FUNDS
PENSION INSURANCE
PENSION REFORM
PENSION SAVINGS
PENSION SYSTEM
PENSIONERS
PILLAR BENEFIT
POPULATION GROWTH
PRICE INDEXATION
PRIVATE PENSION
PRIVATE PILLARS
RETIREMENT
RETIREMENT AGE
RISK DIVERSIFICATION
SUPERVISORY FRAMEWORK
SWITCHING STRATEGY
TAX TREATMENT
UNEMPLOYMENT
WAGE GROWTH
Rocha, Roberto
Vittas, Dimitri
Pension Reform in Hungary : A Preliminary Assessment
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
Hungary
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2631
description Hungary is entering the fourth year of a multi-pillar pension reform that has proved popular among workers despite initially lukewarm support from the government that succeeded the reforming government, and despite the poor initial performance of capital markets because of Russia's crisis in 1998. Roughly half the labor force joined the new system voluntarily. Most who switched were younger than 40. Many people switched to the system because it offered more risk diversification. The pay-as-you-go (PAYG) system, which had been severely damaged by repeated manipulation of its parameters, clearly offered a low return on contributions. The new system is still predominantly PAYG. The first pillar accounts for more than two-thirds of the total contribution, but the new second pillar offers the chance of higher average returns on contributions. Most workers probably intuited the risk and returns inherent in a pure PAYG system and mixed system, including the capital market risk in the second pillar and the political risk in the PAYG pillar. The new system offers better prospects of long-run risk-adjustment returns for young workers, and most young workers effectively opted for the new system. But the new system was probably oversold as well, making older workers - who would be better off staying in the reformed PAYG system - switch too. The government has so far decided not to increase the contribution to the second pillar from 6 to 8 percent, as originally planned, so efficiency gains in labor and capital markets may also be smaller than expected. Addressing projected deficits in the PAYG system may require further adjustments, such as delaying the retirement age and shifting to indexed prices, reducing net benefits to future generations. Reform has sharply reduced the severe initial bias against future generation but hasn't eliminated it altogether. The voluntary switching strategy achieves the same outcome as a forced switch based on an arbitrarily cutoff age, while preventing legal problems and contributing to the reduction of the implicit pension debt. But it leaves a few individuals worse of the if they'd chosen their best option - a problem a well-designed public information campaign can reduce.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Rocha, Roberto
Vittas, Dimitri
author_facet Rocha, Roberto
Vittas, Dimitri
author_sort Rocha, Roberto
title Pension Reform in Hungary : A Preliminary Assessment
title_short Pension Reform in Hungary : A Preliminary Assessment
title_full Pension Reform in Hungary : A Preliminary Assessment
title_fullStr Pension Reform in Hungary : A Preliminary Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Pension Reform in Hungary : A Preliminary Assessment
title_sort pension reform in hungary : a preliminary assessment
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2014
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/07/1490137/pension-reform-hungary-preliminary-assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19596
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