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Reforming
European Pensions: Urgent Action is Needed
European
governments cannot afford to underestimate the challenge of the
demographic transition currently taking place, according to Professor Tito Boeri of Bocconi University, Milan, and CEPR, speaking at a
CEPR/Royal Economic Society discussion meeting on Thursday 3 February.
In particular, he argued, public pension systems can no longer bear the
full burden of providing pensions and efforts must be made to achieve a
more balanced pension programme with a sufficiently large funded
component. What is more, pension programmes should no longer encourage
early retirement nor should they hamper labour mobility. And there needs
to be greater competition in private pension provision.
Professor
Boeri discerned four distinct trends feeding into the demographic ‘timebomb’:
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In
future years, there will be a large number of retirees relative to
the working population.
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These
retirees will live much longer than at present.
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The
number of children is falling.
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Workers
tend to retire at much younger ages than previous generations.
He
went on to argue that:
Time
has been lost.
The
problem is not demographics per se,
but demographics coupled with excessively generous pension systems -
both in terms of eligibility rules and in terms of benefits paid out to
retirees.
Inevitably
someone will have to pay for the public pension burden.
One
option is to increase social security payroll taxes for current workers
and firms, which would have negative effects on competitiveness and
growth. An alternative is that future generations ‘foot the bill’
for current generations by continued government borrowing. Neither of
these outcomes sounds appealing in an economy that intends to promote
growth. A third option is that some pension promises are broken.
Although such an outcome may endanger the credibility of pension
programmes, credibility is also eroded by not taking action when
everybody is aware that current arrangements are no longer sustainable.
The
credibility of pension programmes must be restored…
Compulsory
contributions to pension systems that are not deemed sustainable can
only be viewed by workers as extra taxes, rather than savings for old
age, with negative effects on employment.
….
and restoring credibility means taking a long-term perspective.
Public
pension programmes, particularly if they are unfunded (current workers
pay for current retirees), lack the flexibility to cope with the
demographic transition. A serious risk is that pension reforms take a
short-term perspective, because of political constraints.
What
to Reform?
Public
pension systems can no longer bear the full burden of providing
pensions.
Where
necessary, efforts must be made to achieve a more balanced pension
programme with a sufficiently large funded component. The major steps to
be taken in this respect are:
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Promoting
social partnership by involving workers, government and industry in
the provision of income for retirement.
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Encouraging
individual responsibility for retirement saving.
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Confining
the role of public pension systems mainly to redistributing
resources from the lifetime rich to the lifetime poor, and shifting
to the other social partners the responsibility for full old-age
insurance provision for workers.
All
this does not mean that pension funds and firms should pay the bill for
the gaps in building up a pension, but simply that workers will have
more freedom to decide on the best use of their money.
An
ageing Europe needs to retain workers in the workforce when they reach
the peak of their seniority: pension
programmes should no longer encourage early retirement.
Pension
arrangements should not hamper labour mobility.
Workers should be able to move freely across jobs. Hence long vesting
periods should be avoided (rights to receive a benefit should be made
readily available), and the build-up of pension rights should be
protected while the transferability of pension rights both within a
country and between countries should be guaranteed. Most of all, the
taxation of pension funds should not be an obstacle to portability of
pension rights.
Workers
and firms can join forces and exploit
‘global’ market opportunities in order to provide higher
standards of living to workers in their old age. It should be stressed
that global investment is the key to achieving flexibility of pension
programmes vis-à-vis demographic and political crises: this is exactly
where unfunded pension systems fail.
Global
diversification of resources accumulated for retirement provision can be
achieved only if there are no
barriers to capital movements within the ‘prudent man’
framework. Prudential rules are actually inconsistent with national
quotas in the allocation of the portfolio of pension funds.
This
also implies allowing greater
competition in private pension provision. Hence there should be
freedom of contract between sponsoring companies and pension funds and
the avoidance of any automatic cost-increasing mechanism being imposed
on pension funds (that is, automatic linking of benefits to wages,
etc.).
How?
It
cannot be denied that reforms have
a cost. What is more, resistance to change naturally arises from the
fear of being among the losers in the transition from the old system to
the new one. Yet, all generations
can benefit from a more balanced (that is, more funded) pension
programme, if the costs and the benefits of pension reforms are shared.
In particular, compensation mechanisms can and should be designed to
avoid the middle generations bearing any extra burden caused by changes
in the system. This would contribute to winning public support for
reform.
Note
for Editors: Tito Boeri was speaking at a
public meeting on ‘Defusing the Pensions Timebomb: What are the Policy
Options?’, organised by CEPR and the Royal Economic Society (RES), and
supported by Morgan Stanley Dean Witter.
Boeri
is Professor of Economics at Bocconi University in Milan; Director of
the Rodolfo de Benedetti Foundation in Milan; a CEPR Research Fellow;
and coordinator of a report on pensions commissioned by the European
Round Table of Industrialists and due to be presented to Romano Prodi,
President of the European Commission, on 14 February.
For
Further Information: contact Tito Boeri on
00-39-02-5836-3323 (fax: 00-39-02-5836-3302; email: Boeri@uni-bocconi.it);
or RES Media Consultant Romesh Vaitilingam on 0117-983-9770 or
0468-661095 (email: romesh@compuserve.com).
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