Simulating Pension Income Scenarios with penCalc : An Illustration for India's National Pension System

This paper sets out initial results from a new modeling exercise for Defined Contribution (DC) pensions. It develops a package called penCalc based on the open source software language R, which is popular in the academic and modeling communities. A...

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Main Authors: Sane, Renuka, Price, William J.
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/198991516201363951/Simulating-pension-income-scenarios-with-penCalc-an-illustration-for-Indias-national-pension-system
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29214
id okr-10986-29214
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-292142021-06-08T14:42:48Z Simulating Pension Income Scenarios with penCalc : An Illustration for India's National Pension System Sane, Renuka Price, William J. PENSIONS PENSION FUNDS RETIREMENT INCOME FORECASTING SIMULATION MODELING DEFINED CONTRIBUTION This paper sets out initial results from a new modeling exercise for Defined Contribution (DC) pensions. It develops a package called penCalc based on the open source software language R, which is popular in the academic and modeling communities. All the coding is made freely available. The tool is illustrated for India's DC National Pension System. The aim is not to present the perfect model for India, but to show how the tool works so that policy makers and regulators can see its potential advantages and develop it for their own uses. It generates scenarios for future assets and income dependent on user-defined and changeable assumptions for asset returns, contributions, wages, years in the labor force, and annuity prices, among other parameters. Assumptions can be tailored to different countries and user determined scenarios. Many extensions could be developed, which will be the subject of future work. The international context is highlighted through similar modeling by regulators and pension funds in other jurisdictions. Some of these are more complex or complete than the results in this paper, but by explaining the initial model and making the coding freely available, the authors provide a powerful yet simple and low-cost tool to be adopted and adapted. 2018-01-23T16:43:41Z 2018-01-23T16:43:41Z 2018-01 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/198991516201363951/Simulating-pension-income-scenarios-with-penCalc-an-illustration-for-Indias-national-pension-system http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29214 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8304 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper South Asia India
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic PENSIONS
PENSION FUNDS
RETIREMENT INCOME
FORECASTING
SIMULATION
MODELING
DEFINED CONTRIBUTION
spellingShingle PENSIONS
PENSION FUNDS
RETIREMENT INCOME
FORECASTING
SIMULATION
MODELING
DEFINED CONTRIBUTION
Sane, Renuka
Price, William J.
Simulating Pension Income Scenarios with penCalc : An Illustration for India's National Pension System
geographic_facet South Asia
India
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8304
description This paper sets out initial results from a new modeling exercise for Defined Contribution (DC) pensions. It develops a package called penCalc based on the open source software language R, which is popular in the academic and modeling communities. All the coding is made freely available. The tool is illustrated for India's DC National Pension System. The aim is not to present the perfect model for India, but to show how the tool works so that policy makers and regulators can see its potential advantages and develop it for their own uses. It generates scenarios for future assets and income dependent on user-defined and changeable assumptions for asset returns, contributions, wages, years in the labor force, and annuity prices, among other parameters. Assumptions can be tailored to different countries and user determined scenarios. Many extensions could be developed, which will be the subject of future work. The international context is highlighted through similar modeling by regulators and pension funds in other jurisdictions. Some of these are more complex or complete than the results in this paper, but by explaining the initial model and making the coding freely available, the authors provide a powerful yet simple and low-cost tool to be adopted and adapted.
format Working Paper
author Sane, Renuka
Price, William J.
author_facet Sane, Renuka
Price, William J.
author_sort Sane, Renuka
title Simulating Pension Income Scenarios with penCalc : An Illustration for India's National Pension System
title_short Simulating Pension Income Scenarios with penCalc : An Illustration for India's National Pension System
title_full Simulating Pension Income Scenarios with penCalc : An Illustration for India's National Pension System
title_fullStr Simulating Pension Income Scenarios with penCalc : An Illustration for India's National Pension System
title_full_unstemmed Simulating Pension Income Scenarios with penCalc : An Illustration for India's National Pension System
title_sort simulating pension income scenarios with pencalc : an illustration for india's national pension system
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/198991516201363951/Simulating-pension-income-scenarios-with-penCalc-an-illustration-for-Indias-national-pension-system
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29214
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