Lfeyriskerfin Norurlndunum me herslu snemmtekinn lfeyrir - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Lfeyriskerfin Norurlndunum me herslu snemmtekinn lfeyrir

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Title: Lfeyriskerfin Norurlndunum me herslu snemmtekinn lfeyrir


1
Lífeyriskerfin á Norðurlöndunum - með áherslu á
snemmtekinn lífeyrir
Fulltrúaráðsfundur Landssamtaka
lífeyrissjóða Grand Hótel, 13. nóvember, 2001
  • Tryggvi Þór Herbertsson
  • Hagfræðistofnun HÍ

2
Introduction
  • On the whole, labor force participation of older
    workers is declining in the industrialized
    countries due to changing age structures.
  • In response to high unemployment, many countries
    expanded early retirement schemes in the 1980s.
  • In the Nordic countries, substantial decreases in
    labor market participation have in particular
    occurred in Finland and, more recently, in
    Norway.
  • Despite the common trend toward earlier
    retirement, however, labor market participation
    rates differ significantly across countries. This
    divergence indicates that participation depends
    on a wide variety of factors.
  • Older workers in Iceland have among the highest
    participation rates in the world. Participation
    rates are also relatively high in Norway, despite
    the recent decline. However, Denmark and Finland
    have experienced low and falling participation
    rates, although there is some evidence that these
    rates may now be leveling out.
  •  

3
Introduction
  • This combination of earlier retirement and longer
    life expectancy results in a much longer span of
    inactivity.
  • Regardless of its causes, the withdrawal of older
    workers from the labor force leads to an increase
    in unused production capacity, a reduced tax
    base, and a heavier load on pension and fiscal
    systems.
  • If the trend toward earlier retirement were to
    continue far into the future, it would pose even
    larger fiscal threats to pension systems,
    especially those that do not include a penalty
    for early retirement.
  • The trend toward earlier retirement and the
    related issue of disability raise substantial
    policy challenges.
  • General outline of presentation
  • Demographics in the Nordic countries
  • Pension arrangements
  • Early retirement
  • The costs
  •  

4
Key Figures
5
The Demographic Time Bomb?
6
Demographics
7
Demographics
  • Key features
  • Low mortality
  • High fertility
  • Reasonably low migration

Proportion of population aged 65 and over
8
Demographics
9
Demographics
Old-age dependency ratio (65 over 20-64) in
Sweden 1860-2100
  • Dependency ratio tends to plateau
  • Costs are permanently, not temporarily, higher

10
The Nordic Welfare State
11
The Nordic Welfare Model
  • Pensions have a long history in the Nordic
    countries.
  • The generic Nordic pension system combines a
    public, means-tested minimum benefit a public
    earnings-related component and
    occupational-based private pension coverage.
  • In 1998, pension spending amounted to
  • 8.8 per cent of GDP in Denmark,
  • 5.7 per cent in Finland,
  • 3.3 per cent in Iceland,
  • 7.8 per cent in Norway,
  • 10.7 per cent in Sweden.
  • Demographic trends will increase pension costs
    significantly over time. Although the results
    vary somewhat from country to country, the trend
    is unambiguous the elderly proportion in the
    population will exceed 15 per cent by 2030 in all
    the Nordic countries.

12
Denmark
  • Public old age pensions combine flat-rate
    pensions with a small earnings related pension,
    FP-pensions (pay-as-you-go financed)
  • Flat-rate funded labor market supplementary plan
    (ATP-pensions)
  • New funded supplementary plan (SP-pensions),
    paying a flat-rate 10-year annuity from the age
    of 67
  • Occupational DC pensions
  • Private pensions schemes with insurance companies
    and banks

13
Denmark
  • Private (occupational and personal schemes)
    coverage high in Denmark

Percentage Contributing to a Private Pension
Scheme in Denmark in 1998
14
Finland
  • Flat rate/very small earnings related Finnish
    National Pension (KELA)
  • Mandatory TEL/related DB plans (partially funded)
  • Third pillar insurance funds

Male TEL Contributions 1999 in Finland
15
Iceland
16
Norway
  • Flat rate progressive earnings scheme
  • DB occupational pensions
  • Top up accounts

17
Sweden
  • Old PAYG system
  • PPM
  • Occupational schemes
  • Insurance plans

18
Minimum Pensions
 
 
As of 4th of April 2000
19
The Costs of Early Retirement
20
Labor Force Participation
  • In 17 OECD countries, for which data are
    available, the proportion of the 55-64 age cohort
    of employed males fell by an average of more than
    10 percentage points between 1980 and 1996.
  • For the Nordic countries the inactivity of those
    55 years and older has increased substantially
    over the last four decades.

Trends in the inactivity of males 55 in the
Nordic countries 1965-98 (weighted average)
21
Early Retirement
Labour force participation rates among 55-64
years old males in the Nordic countries, 1977-96
22
Costs of Early Retirement
  • Herbertsson and Orszag (2001) developed a
    framework to assess the economic costs of early
    retirement in the OECD.
  • There are substantial differences among the
    countries in costs due to early retirement.
  • In particular, Iceland has the lowest costs in
    the OECD.

Costs of early retirement of 55-64 year-olds as a
share of potential GDP in the Nordic countries
and the OECD
23
Why Early Retirement?
  • Labor supply explanations
  • Incentives (pension wealth, accrual rate,
    earnings tests, tax considerations, etc.)
  • Disability (morbidity increases with longevity)
  • Transition from long-term unemployment into
    retirement
  • Government policies (lump-of-labor fallacy)
  • Labor demand explanations (possibly
    pseudo-theorems)
  • Jobs get obsolete and older workers lack skills
    (education) to switch jobs
  • Older workers less productive than younger workers

24
Why Early Retirement?
  • The UK Cabinet Office (2000) estimates that at
    most one-third of early retirees have planned
    their retirement.
  • Labor force status of people not working between
    50 and state pension in the UK
  • Voluntary inactive
  • Retired (18 per cent)
  • Taking care of family (14 per cent)?
  • Involuntary inactive
  • Long-term sick or disabled (44 per cent)
  • Looking for work (10 per cent)
  • Other reasons for inactiveness
  • Dont need job (5 per cent)
  • Other (10 per cent)

25
Early Retirement Denmark
 
26
Early Retirement Finland
 
27
Early Retirement Sweden
 
28
Late Retirement Only in Iceland
Labour force participation rates for men over 65
in the OECD
29
Disability Morbidity on the Move
Disability incidence among men and women age
55-59 in the Nordic countries
30
Disability Morbidity on the Move
Percent of age-group with more than 75
disability pension in the Nordic countries
31
Encouraging Work
  • Private recognition of external costs of early
    retirement.
  • Public voucher programs, quantity restrictions,
    special schemes (FlexJob in Denmark).

32
Conclusion
  • Despite the political unpopularity of reforming
    early retirement systems, several countries have
    already taken steps to tighten eligibility rules
    and strengthen incentives to retire later.
  • However, even these additional incentives are
    often weak or clash with supplementary pension
    provision.
  • Furthermore, in most countries, few incentives
    exist to retire late, as reflected in low labor
    force participation after the formal retirement
    age.
  • Steps taken so far to to challenge the
    demographic time bomb
  • Denmark ATP, occupational pensions
  • Finland prefunding of TEL, etc.
  • Iceland voluntary individual accounts,
    mandatory occupational plans
  • Norway the petroleum fund, changes in
    legislation
  • Sweden - PPM
  •  
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