42540 W O R L D B A N K W O R K I N G P A P E R N O . 1 2 9 Sustainability of Pension Systems in the New EU Member States and Croatia Coping with Aging Challenges and Fiscal Pressures Leszek Kasek Thomas Laursen Emilia Skrok THE WORLD BANK W O R L D B A N K W O R K I N G P A P E R N O . 1 2 9 Sustainability of Pension Systems in the New EU Member States and Croatia Coping with Aging Challenges and Fiscal Pressures Leszek Kasek Thomas Laursen Emilia Skrok THE WORLD BANK Washington, D.C. Copyright © 2008 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20433, U.S.A. All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America First Printing: January 2008 printed on recycled paper 1 2 3 4 5 11 10 09 08 World Bank Working Papers are published to communicate the results of the Bank's work to the development community with the least possible delay. 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Leszek Kasek is an Economist in the Poverty Reduction & Economic Management sector unit of the Europe & Central Asia regional department of the World Bank. Thomas Laursen is a Lead Economist in the same unit. Emilia Skrok is an Economist in the same unit. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Kasek, Leszek. Sustainability of pension systems in the new EU member states and Croatia: coping with aging challenges and fiscal pressures / Leszek Kasek, Thomas Laursen, Emilia Skrok. p. cm.--(World Bank working paper ; no. 129) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-8213-7369-9--ISBN 978-0-8213-7370-5 (electronic) 1. Pensions--European Union countries. 2. Pensions--Croatia. I. Laursen, Thomas. II. Skrok, Emilia. III. World Bank. IV. Title. HD7164.K37 2008 331.252094--dc22 2007041804 Contents Acknowledgments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . v 1. Overview of Current Pension Systems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Recent Pension Reforms in the EU10+1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Current PAYG Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Experience with Second Pillar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 2. Medium-Long Term Sustainability of Pension Schemes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 3. Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 LIST OF TABLES 1. Retirement Ages in the EU10+1 in 2007 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 2. Structure of Pension Systems in the EU10+1 Countries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 3. Basic Characteristics of Mixed Old-age Pension Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 4. Gross Replacement Rates in Mid-1990s and Mid-2000s, Percent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 5. Basic Demographic and Labor Market Characteristics by Gender . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 6. Indexation of Pensions in Selected European Countries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 7. Contribution Bases for Self-employed, 2005. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 8. Cross-subsidization of Self-employed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 9. Implicit Individual IRR of the Pension Systems in the EU10+1 Countries, 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 10. Social Insurance Balance, Percent of GDP. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 11. Financial Indicators of Agricultural Social Insurance Fund (KRUS) in Poland in 2000­05. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 12. Asset Allocation of Private Pension Funds, 2004 (percent) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 13. Switching to the Second Pillar and Revenue Losses to the PAYG System, 2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 14. Regulatory Administrative Charges to Second and Third Pillar Pension Funds, 2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 15. Average Real Rate of Return on Investment of Assets in Private Pension Pillar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 16. Old-age Pension Expenditure: Current Situation and Prospects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 17. Long-term Sustainability of Public Finances. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 iii iv Contents 18. Implied Replacement Rates (Illustrative) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 19. Theoretical Replacement Rate of a Male Worker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 LIST OF FIGURES 1. Pension Expenditure in 1996­2004, percent of GDP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 2. Breakdown of Pension Expenditure in 2004, percent of GDP. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 3. Employment Rate of Older Workers (ages 55­64) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 4. Average Exit Age from the Labor Force Weighted by the Probability of Withdrawal from the Labor Market. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 5. Benefits per Year of Service (Accrual Rates) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 6. Pension Contribution Rates in Selected European Countries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 7. Pension Contribution Rates and Shares of Undeclared Work in the EU10+1 Countries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 8. Implicit IRRs and Shares of Undeclared Work in the EU10+1 Countries . . . . . . . . 19 9. Population Aged 65+ Years, Percent Change Relative to 2004 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 10. Eurostat Projections of Old-age Dependency Ratio in Europe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 11. Projected Average Replacement Rate for Old-Age Pensioners in Romania (Percent of Average Wage) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 12. Projected Replacement Rates in Croatia 2000­40. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Acknowledgments T his report was written by Leszek Kasek, Thomas Laursen, and Emilia Skrok. Valuable contributions were received from Paulina Ho da and Anita Schwarz. The paper benefited from valuable comments from Zoran Anusic, Christian Bodewig, Bernard Funck, Stella Ilieva, Matija Laco, Anton Marcincin, Catalin Pauna, and Sanja Madzarevic-Sujster. The report is part of a series of studies on current issues in public finance reform in the new EU Member States which joined the European Union on May 1, 2004 (Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia), those which joined the EU on January 1, 2006 (Bulgaria and Romania), and Croatia. These studies have been undertaken since 2005 and coordinated by Thomas Laursen, Lead Economist for Cen- tral Europe and the Baltic States in the World Bank. Marta Michalska provided excellent administrative and logistical support throughout the process of preparing these studies. v CHAPTER 1 Overview of Current Pension Systems Recent Pension Reforms in the EU10+1 Over the last decade, pension reform has been a major issue on the political agenda across Europe. All European countries are profoundly affected by aging populations resulting from lower fertility and increased life expectancy. In order to make pension systems more sus- tainable in light of prospective demographic developments, and in some cases to address cur- rent financing problems, EU10+1 countries have been reforming their pension systems since the mid-1990s. The reforms have combined measures to delay retirement, link benefits more closely to contributions, and diversify risk. While all EU10+1 countries have made changes to their public pay-as-you-go (PAYG) system, some have gone further by diverting some of the pension contributions to fully- funded, privately-managed pension savings. In most countries, switching to the new mixed system has been mandatory for younger workers and new entrants to the labor market. All countries have also introduced voluntary, supplementary pension schemes. PAYG reforms have included increases in retirement ages (including bringing the retire- ment age for women more in line with that of men), reducing possibilities and incentives for early retirement, scaling back privileges for special groups, revising benefit accrual formulas, changing indexation mechanisms, and increasing contribution periods or rates. Two coun- tries (Latvia and Poland) have fundamentally reformed their PAYG systems through the introduction of individual Notionally Defined Contribution accounts that link benefits 1 2 World Bank Working Paper directly to contributions and spread retirement benefits over the remaining life expectancy at the time of retirement.1 Still, current retirement ages in all EU10+1 countries remain lower for women than for men and in some cases are dependent on the number of children raised, varying from about 54 years in Slovakia and Slovenia to 60 years in Poland (Table 1). For men, retirement ages vary from 58 in Slovenia to 65 in Poland. While no further changes are planned in Poland, all other EU10+1 countries have approved gradual increases in retirement ages for women and in some cases for men too: retirement ages for both women and men will generally increase to 62­65 years. Several countries have early retirement schemes allowing for retire- ment two or three years before the statutory age (in Latvia and Croatia, as much as five years). Some countries (such as Lithuania in 1995 and the Czech Republic in 1990­92 and 1995) have eliminated early retirement privileges for certain professional and social groups, while these remain in other countries (including Poland, Croatia, and Romania). Poland, Hungary, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Romania and Croatia and most recently Slo- vakia have introduced a second pension pillar through the diversion of part of the pension contributions to fully funded, privately managed pension plans (Table 2). The new, mixed sys- tems are mandatory for at least all younger workers or new entrants to the labor market in all countries except Lithuania where participation is voluntary, even for new entrants.2 The introduction of such mixed systems has been motivated mainly by risk diversifica- tion (spreading of wage bill and political risk to include financial market risk), but also the provision of greater incentives to contribute through a closer link between contributions and benefits, increased individual choice, capital market development, and expected higher rates of return. It is also sometimes hoped that the inflow of pension funds' portfolio invested in private equities will boost aggregate investment rates, and improves prospects for economic growth rate in the future. At the same time, the switch from pure PAYG to mixed systems involves greater indi- vidual risks (investment risk), potentially higher transaction costs (fees to fund managers), and transition costs to the PAYG systems as part of contributions are diverted to private sav- ings and partially invested in non-governmental financial instruments3 while current pen- sioners must still be fully financed from the PAYG system. The countries which have adopted mixed systems have sought to limit these transition costs through making the switch mandatory only for younger people and phasing in gradu- ally higher contribution rates to the funded pillar. For example, Hungary began the funded pillar with a 6 percent contribution rate compared to the current 8 percent. Given the con- cern in the EU10+1 countries for maintaining fiscal discipline, none of the countries opted for an immediate or complete shift to the second pillar such as Mexico or Kazakhstan did. Current PAYG Systems Despitethereformeffortswhichhavebeenundertaken,PAYGpensionexpenditures(asashare of GDP) have remained high and fairly constant until now (Figure 1). In 2004, Poland's expen- 1. Such a system was initially developed by Sweden, but has been followed by some other countries in Europe (for example, Italy). 2. In Hungary, where participation in the new system was mandatory for everyone, retirees who joined the new system less than 10 years before retiring and whose benefits from the second pillar are less than 25 percent of the PAYG benefits have recently been granted the option of moving back to the previous stand-alone PAYG system until 2012. 3. See more in Table 12. Table 1. Retirement Ages in the EU10+1 in 2007 Retirement Age Planned Current Law Years of Insurance Introduction Early Retirement Sustainability Hungary Women 62 1st pillar: 15 years Available to those involved in jobs allowing 2nd pillar: no minimum exemption by age. Entitlement to pension period starts 2 years earlier to those who have of worked in such activities for at least 8 years Pension and pensionable age is further reduced by 1 year for every additional period of 4 years. Men 62 1st pillar: 15 years Available to those involved in jobs allowing Systems 2nd pillar: no minimum exemption by age. Entitlement to pension period starts 2 years earlier to those who have worked in such activities for at least 10 years in and pensionable age is further reduced by the 1 year for every additional period of 5 years. New Poland EU Women 60 20--with guaranteed mini- Persons born before 1.1.1949--55 and over Member mum pension. Without with a 30-years qualifying period. guaranteed min. pension: Persons born since 1.1.1949--no provisions persons born before States 1.1.1949--15; persons born since 1.1.1949--no min. period is required. and Croatia (continued) 3 4 World Bank Table 1. Retirement Ages in the EU10+1 in 2007 (Continued) Working Retirement Age Planned Paper Current Law Years of Insurance Introduction Early Retirement Men 65 25--with guaranteed mini- Valid for both men and women born before mum pension. Without 1.1.1949: totally incapacitated persons may guaranteed minimum pen- receive pension 5 years early if they have ful- sion: persons born before filled the qualifying period requirements; 1.1.1949--20; persons persons working in unhealthy conditions or born since 1.1.1949--no performing a specified type of work (official min. period is required. list)--5 (e.g. rail workers), 10 (e.g. miners, steel workers, pilots) or 15 years early (wind instrument musicians). Persons born since 1.1.1949--no provisions Czech Republic Women 56 to 60, 25 years of insurance; 63 (without children) 2013 up to 3 years before the normal retirement age according 15 years if aged 65 59­62 (differentiated to the acc. to the number of number children brought up) of children Increasing by raised 4 months annually or by two months annu- ally once women reach the retirement age for eligibility for the old-age pension of men Men 61.8 63 (increasing by 2013 up to 3 years before the normal retirement age 2 months annually) Slovakia Women 56­60 10 62 (increasing by nine 2014 It is possible if min 10 years of membership (depends on months every calen- and min. amount of benefit have been number of dar year) reached. children raised) Men 62 10 Estonia Sustainability Women 60 15 years for 1st pillar; 63 (to be raised 2016 Available up to 3 years before the legal 5 contribution years for the 6 months each year) retirement age 2nd pillar Men 63 -- of Slovenia Pension Women 60 years 20 years of a qualifying 61 2008 58 (38 years of service) 8 months period Systems Men 62 63 2009 58 (40 years of service) Latvia in Women 61 10 62 2009 59 (30 years of insurance) the Men 62 60 (30 years of insurance) New Lithuania EU Women 60 15 years for membership, 55 (30 years of insurance period; at least Member 30 years for drawing 12 months registered as unemployed) full pension Men 62.5 57.5 (30 years of insurance period; at least States 12 months registered as unemployed) (continued) and Croatia 5 6 Table 1. Retirement Ages in the EU10+1 in 2007 (Continued) World Retirement Age Bank Planned Working Current Law Years of Insurance Introduction Early Retirement Bulgaria Paper Women 59 and 15­25 60 2009 Persons who have worked 15 years under the 93 points 2nd category of labor and aged 52 Men 63 and 15­25 Persons who have worked 15 years under the 100 points 2nd category of labor and aged 57 Romania Women 58 10 60 2014 53 Men 63 10 65 2014 58 Croatia Women 58 17 (declining by 6 months 60 (increasing by 2008 53 per year until it is 15 in 6 months annually) 2008) Men 63 17 (declining by 6 months 65 (increasing by 2008 58 per year until it reaches 6 months annually) 15 in 2008) Notes: Hungary: Early retirement with 38 years of service; a reduced pension is paid with at least 33 years of service. Poland: Noncontributory years may not exceed 1/3 of contribution years. Slovakia: Early pension can be taken only from the individual funded account and if the amount in the account can buy an annuity of 120 percent of subsistence level; the public part is only available at normal retirement ages. Latvia: Early retirement with 30 years of insurance. Lithuania: Early pension: up to 5 years before the normal retirement age with 30 years of insurance and after 1 year of unemployment (beginning July 1, 2004). Also, the person should not be a receiver of pensions or periodical compensation of any kind from the social insurance or state funds. Early pensions are not eligible for farmers. Source: International Social Security Association (2004), Social Security Programs Throughout the World: Europe 2004. Republic of Slovenia, National Strategy Report on Adequate and Sustainable Pensions, 2005; European Commission, Adequate and sustainable pensions, Synthesis report 2006. Sustainability of Pension Systems in the New EU Member States and Croatia 7 Table 2. Structure of Pension Systems in the EU10+1 Countries Statutory Schemes PAYG Financed from Social Security Main Reforms Contributions and Taxes Funded Czech Republic 1993­1995, 2003 DB None Estonia 1993, 1999­2002 DB, similar to German Mandatory fully system funded DC (2002) Hungary 1998 DB Mandatory fully funded DC (1999) Latvia 1995, 1998, NDC based Mandatory fully funded 2000 DC (2001) Lithuania 1995, 2003­2004 DB, flat-rate & earnings- Voluntary fully related part founded DC (2004) Poland 1998 NDC based Mandatory fully funded DC (1999) Slovenia 3 pillar reform DB None rejected 1999, existing pillar strengthened thereafter Slovakia 1993, 2004 DB, Points accumulation Mandatory fully funded system DC (2004) Bulgaria 2000 DB, individual point Mandatory fully funded accumulation system DC (2002) Romania 2001 DB, individual point Mandatory fully funded accumulation system DC (planned) Croatia 1999­2002 DB, earnings related (for Mandatory fully funded those only in PAYG); DB, DC (2002) half of the benefit is flat, years service related & second half earnings related (for those in PAYG and second pillar) Notes: DC = Defined Contribution. DB = Defined Benefit. PAYG = Pay-As-You-Go, i.e. financing current benefits out of current revenues. NDC = Notional Defined Contribution. Source: Wagner Helmut (2004). Pension Reform in the New EU Member States--Will a 3-Pillar Pension System Work? Discussion Paper No. 372, December 2004; National Strategy Reports on Adequate and Sustainable Pensions, 2005. Bulgaria, Croatia and Romania. Economic report, World Bank Staff Working Paper, August 2005. diture on pensions amounted to 13 percent of GDP, among the highest in the EU. Conversely, the Baltic countries and Slovakia allocated the lowest portion of GDP to pensions (less than 7 percentofGDP).Aroundtheworld,socialspendingtendstorisewithpercapitaincome.While many of the EU10+1 countries are clustered toward the bottom of the distribution, they spend relatively large sums on their pension systems given their income levels. Slovenia spends as much as the United Kingdom as a share of GDP, but has an income level less than 65 percent that of this country. In a similar vein, Lithuania and Slovakia spend twice as much as Ireland on pensions while their per capita GDP levels are less than 40 percent of Ireland's. 8 World Bank Working Paper Table 3. Basic Characteristics of Mixed Old-age Pension Systems Total Starting Type of Country Contributions First Pillar Funded Date Pension Hungary 26.5 18.5 8.0 1998 Mandatory Poland 19.52 12.22 7.30 1999 Mandatory (< 30) Latvia 20.0 18.0, gradually 2.0, gradually 2001 Mandatory (< 30) decreasing to rising to 10.0 by 2010 10.0 by 2010 Estonia 22.0 16.0 6.0 (of which 2002 Mandatory (< 18) 4 come from PAYG contribution) Lithuania 26.0 22.5, gradually 3.5, gradually 2004 Optional 2. pillar decreasing to rising to 5.5 20.5 by 2007 by 2007 Slovakia 18.0 9.0 9.0 2005 Mandatory (< 18) Bulgaria 32.0 27.0 5.0 2002 Mandatory (< 42) Romania 29.25 29.25 2.0 gradually rising Expected Mandatory (< 35) to 6.0 by 2012 in 2008 Croatia 20.0 15.0 5.0 2002 Mandatory (< 40) Source: World Bank; ILO; Golias´ (2005); "Bulgaria, Croatia and Romania. Economic report." World Bank Staff Working Paper, August 2005. Expenditure on old-age pensions topped the list of pension expenditure in all EU countries, but none of the EU10+1 countries were among the highest spenders in this area in Europe (Figure 2). However, several EU10+1 countries have high levels of disability spending relative to old age spending, most notably Poland, Croatia but also Hungary and the Czech Republic. Also, countries such as Slovenia, Poland and the Czech Republic Figure 1. Pension Expenditure in 1996­2004, percent of GDP 14 13.3 12.3 1996 2000 12.2 12 2003 2004 10.9 10.3 10 9.3 8.4 8 7.3 6.7 6.8 6.9 6.2 6 4 2 0 EU15 Rep. Latvia Estonia Poland Croatia Slovakia Hungary Lithuania Slovenia Bulgaria Romania Czech Source: Eurostat. For BG, RO and HR--national agencies. Sustainability of Pension Systems in the New EU Member States and Croatia 9 Figure 2. Breakdown of Pension Expenditure in 2004, percent of GDP 15 Old age Disability Survivors Early retirement 12 9 6 3 0 Italy EU15 Malta Rep. Spain Austria Poland France Greece Latvia Sweden Croatia Norway Iceland Cyprus EstoniaIreland Germany Portugal FinlandBelgiumDenmark Slovenia Kingdom Hungary Slovakia Bulgaria Lithuania Romania Switzerland Netherlands Czech Luxembourg United Source: Eurostat; based on LFS. spend relatively large amounts on early retirement. Taking all forms of retirement into account, Poland spends more relative to GDP than the EU-15 average and Croatia is not far behind. The gap between high- and low-spending countries results largely from factors other than differences in the age structure of the population. First, the EU10+1 countries gener- ally still have low effective retirement ages. This is partly because of incentives to retire early and partly because of past labor market policies that intentionally allowed older workers to retire early in response to rising unemployment. Recently, however, employment of older workers (aged 55­64), especially women aged 55­59, has been increasing reflecting the extension of retirement ages and the payment of full pensions to working pensioners in some countries (for example, Estonia, Lithuania, and the Czech Republic; see Figure 3). Second, high pension spending arises because benefit levels, as measured by the replace- ment rate (the ratio of a person's pension to his or her income when working), tend to be generous. Third, the role of public pension spending tends to be larger in countries where public pensions receive little supplement from private schemes. Fourth, in most of the EU10+1, labor force participation rates were extremely high among both men and women pre-transition so almost all elderly have rights to a pension. In Western Europe, by con- trast, aside from the Scandinavian countries, women's labor force participation rates are significantly lower than that for men, so that while almost all elderly families have access to a pension, not all individual elderly do. Let us now examine some of these factors in greater detail. Retirement Age The EU10+1 countries have relatively low effective retirement ages, although these tend to be rising in recent years (Figure 4). The lower retirement ages suggest that not only is the stock 10 World Bank Working Paper Figure 3. Employment Rate of Older Workers (ages 55­64) 1998 2000 2002 2004 2005 60 56.1 49.5 49.2 50 44.1 44.5 39.4 40 34.7 33.0 30.3 30.7 30.1 30 27.2 20 10 0 EU15 Rep. Latvia Estonia Poland Croatia Hungary Slovakia Lithuania zech Slovenia Bulgaria Romania C Source: Eurostat; based on LFS. of current retirees high, but future retirees in the EU10+1 will also be younger and eligible to collect pensions for a longer period of time than in the Western European countries (provided life expectancies in East Europe further converge to West European standards). The low retirement ages for women are particularly problematic because--contrary to the situation for males--the life expectancy of women is similar across Europe. Figure 4. Average Exit Age from the Labor Force Weighted by the Probability of Withdrawal from the Labor Market 2001 2004 64 62 60 58 56 54 52 Malta Rep. EU15 Italia Spain Poland France Greece Croatia Finland Norway EstoniaCyprus Ireland Latvia Iceland Austria Slovakia Belgium Romania Hungary Bulgaria Lithuania Germany Denmark Kingdom Portugal Sweden Czech Luxembourg Netherlands Switzerland United Source: Eurostat; based on LFS. Sustainability of Pension Systems in the New EU Member States and Croatia 11 Replacement Rates Table 4. Gross Replacement Rates in Mid-1990s and Mid-2000s, Meanwhile, replacement rates have been Percent declining in most of the EU10+1 countries, Gross Replacement Rates although they remain relatively high in some Year Year of them (Table 4). Many of the EU10+1 countries have taken measures to reduce Czech Rep. 48.6 1996 40.7 2005 gradually replacement rates under public Estonia 25.0 1995 28.8 2005 pension schemes by strengthening the link Hungary 57.9 1996 39.8 2005 between contributions and pensions in the Latvia 62.8 1994 33.1 2005 first pillar, including through extending the Lithuania n.a. 30.9 2005 -- period of an individual's earnings history Poland (1) 55.4 1995 51.6 2004 that is taken into account when calculat- Slovakia 42.5 1994 44.7 2005 ing the pension entitlement, limiting non- Slovenia 68.7 1996 44.3 2005 contributory periods, adjusting the formula Bulgaria 31.0 1995 42.9 2004 used to calculate benefits, and linking index- Romania 43.1 1994 27.6 2005 ation more closely to inflation rather than Croatia 48.6 1997 32.4 2005 wage developments. Over the recent 10 years, (1) includes rural and urban pensions gross replacement rates have risen in Bul- Gross replacement rates calculated as a ratio garia, Estonia, and Slovakia, while Poland, of average old-age pension to average wage. Slovenia, the Czech Republic, and Hungary Source: For mid-1990s: Palacios Robert, still have replacement rates above the re- Pallarčs-Miralles Montserrat (2000). Inter- gional average. The trend towards less gener- national Patterns of Pension Provision. Social Protection Discussion Paper No. 0009, World ous benefit rules has to some extent been Bank. For mid-2005: CSOs, staff calculations. countered, at the individual level, by the effects of longer careers (see Fig- ure 5) and higher incomes. Figure 5. Benefits per Year of Service (Accrual Rates) Current replacement rates vary significantly across the 3 region. The replacement rate is 2.5 proportional to four parameters: base 2 life expectancy at the retirement 1.5 age, career length, average in- pensionable 1 of come during career and internal % 0.5 rate of return in the PAYG sys- 0 tem.4 As these parameters vary UK significantly between genders Rep. Lux Italy Spain Norway Estonia Iceland France Sweden Slovak Austria Poland and countries (see Table 5), re- Lithuania Germany Belgium Finland Slovenia Portugal Hungary Switzerland Czech Netherlands placement rates also differ sub- Source: staff calculations. In the EU15 countries, calcu- stantially. As far as differences lations are based on a specific benefit formula; for EU8 between genders are concerned, the benefit formula when available and comparison of not only is the life expectancy average benefit per year of service to average wage when the benefit formula is not available (e.g. Poland and of women longer at age 60 in Latvia). all EU10+1 countries (differences 4. Internal rate of return in PAYG depends on productivity and employment growth rates. 12 World Bank Working Paper Table 5. Basic Demographic and Labor Market Characteristics by Gender Average Exit Age from the Ratio of Estimated Life Expectancy at Labor Force Employment Rate Female to Male Age of 60 (2003) (2004) 15­64 (2005) Earned Income Men Women Men Women Men Women (HDR 2005) Czeck Rep. 17.3 21.4 61.3 58.9 73.3 56.3 0.64 Estonia 15.4* 21.3* n.a. n.a. 67.0 62.1 0.64 Hungary 15.9 20.8 60.3 60.7 63.1 51.0 0.62 Lithuania 16.2 21.9 n.a. n.a. 66.1 59.4 0.68 Latvia 15.4 20.6 n.a. n.a. 67.6 59.3 0.62 Poland 17.1 22.0 60.0 55.8 58.9 46.8 0.62 Slovenia 17.9 23.1 n.a. n.a. 70.4 61.3 0.62 Slovakia 16.4 21.0 60.3 57.0 64.6 50.9 0.65 Bulgaria 16.1 19.9 62.1 59.5 60.0 51.7 0.67 Romania 16.3 20.0 60.4 58.8 63.7 51.5 0.58 Croatia 16.2** 20.7** n.a. n.a. 61.8*** 47.8*** 0.56 Note: Ratio of female to male earned income is estimated on the basis of data on the ratio of the female non-agricultural wage to the male non-agricultural wage, the female and male shares of the economically active population, the total female and male population and GDP per capita (PPP US$). Average exit age from labor force is weighted by the probability of withdrawal from the labor market. *data for 2002; **data for 2000; ***data for 2004. Source: Eurostat; UNDP, Human Development Report 2005. vary from 3.7 years in Romania to 5.9 years in Estonia), but also their average career length is in most countries (except Hungary) shorter. Additionally, a significant gap between gen- ders' income further lowers the expected replacement rates of women. The Visegrad coun- tries, Bulgaria and Slovenia face the most urgent choice between lowering their replacement rates and increasing the tax burden to maintain current replacement rates. Indexation Formulas Most EU10+1 countries index post-retirement pensions to some combination of inflation and wage growth (Table 6). Indexation mechanisms are easier to compare across countries than benefits, although rules regarding indexation are changing as well. Indexation is a cru- cial parameter because it affects not only the newly retired but the entire stock of retirees, which in the case of the EU10+1 countries is both large and young. The feeling in these coun- tries is often that the gain from expected rapid wage growth during the convergence process should be shared with those who did not have the opportunity to participate in the labor market and benefit directly. However, given the large stock of young pensioners, there is a major fiscal cost associated with sharing this gain across generations which undermines the sustainability of the pension systems. Therefore, some countries like Romania or Estonia have implemented pure inflation indexation. Poland, which adopted pure inflation indexation in Sustainability of Pension Systems in the New EU Member States and Croatia 13 Table 6. Indexation of Pensions in Selected European Countries Gross Net Mixed Country Prices Earnings Earnings Prices Earnings Other Austria Discretionary Belgium X Denmark Discretionary Finland 80 20 France X Germany X Iceland Min. of price or earnings Ireland X Italy X Luxembourg X Netherlands X No legal requirement Spain X Sweden Gross earnings less growth norm of 1.6% Switzerland 50 50 United Kingdom X Czech Republic* 100 33 Estonia 50 50 Hungary 50 50 Latvia 50 50 Lithuania** X Discretionary Poland X Discretionary (from 2008 to be amended to mixed indexation) Slovak Republic 50 50 Slovenia X Bulgaria 50 50 Romania X Croatia 50 50 *For the earnings-related part of the pension, the indexation is a minimum. In practice, since 1995 when the new pension law was enacted, indexation has been 100 percent CPI and 60 percent of real wages. **Mixed system: autonomous decision by the Government for the basic pension plus indexation to incomes for the supplementary part of the first tier. Source: Whitehouse (2007); EU10+1--staff data; Palacios Robert, Pallarčs-Miralles Montserrat (2000). International Patterns of Pension Provision. Social Protection Discussion Paper No. 0009, World Bank; National Strategy Reports on Adequate and Sustainable Pensions, 2005. Anusic, O'Keefe, Madzarevic-Sujster (2003), Pension Reform in Croatia; Social Protection Discussion Paper, World Bank. The Pension System in Romania: The Challenges of Pursuing an Integrated Reform Strategy. November 2004; Document of the World Bank. 14 World Bank Working Paper Figure 6. Pension Contribution Rates in Selected European Countries 40,0 35,0 Employee 30,0 Employer Salary 25,0 20,0 Gross 15,0 of 10,0 % 5,0 0,0 UK Rep. Italy Ireland Latvia Spain France* Sweden Croatia Greece Finland Austria Poland Germany Estonia* Slovenia Bulgaria Lithuania Slovakia Romania Hungary Portugal Belgium* Luxemburg etherlands N Czech Note: EU10+1 (2007); EU15 (2006). Pension contribution rates include old-age, invalidity/disability, and survivors' pensions and other special contributions. In case of France and Estonia, the rate does not include invalidity pension (it is under overall contribution for sickness and maternity), while in case of Belgium the global contribution covers also employment injuries and occupational diseases and unemploy- ment risk. Luxemburg: plus state 8 percent; Ireland: Employer 8.5­12; Greece: for insured after 31.12.92, plus state 10 percent; Denmark: 223.25 DKK per month (ca 2 percent). Source: MISSOC Database, Adequate and sustainable pensions. Joint report by the Commission and the Council, September 2003; National Strategy Reports on Adequate and Sustainable Pensions, 2005 and 2006. 2004, switched to combined price and (discretionary) earnings indexation in July 20055. The share of earnings is a result of negotiations between government, entrepreneurs and trade unions. The EU15 countries are facing similar constraints. Germany, which moved from wage-based indexation to inflation indexation on a temporary basis several years ago, in 2005 suspended all adjustment in response to fiscal pressures. Similarly, after toying with wage indexation, Croatia has now returned to a mixed formula. Contribution Rates On the revenue side, pension contribution rates in most EU10+1 countries are quite high, especially in Bulgaria and Romania, compared with the EU15 and OECD (Figure 6). The combination of high contribution rates and low replacement rates (as in Bulgaria and Romania) is, of course, even more corrosive. High contribution rates not only discourage formal sector employment, but as wages in the EU10+1 converge toward EU15 levels will put increasing pressure on labor competitiveness. 5. From January 2008, the government plans to restore annual valorization instead of periodical adjustment on 1 March following the calendar year in which the CPI is at least 105 percent in compari- son to the calendar year of the last adjustment. Moreover, indexation is supposed to be based at least in 1/5 on increase of wages in the national economy and in 4/5 on increase of consumer prices. Sustainability of Pension Systems in the New EU Member States and Croatia 15 Table 7. Contribution Bases for Self-employed, 2005 Contribution Base Minimum Contribution Base Poland Declared income 60% of average wage Hungary Taxable income Minimum wage Slovenia Taxable income Minimum wage Czech Republic Declared income 50% of average wage Slovakia Taxable income 50% of average monthly taxable income over the previous year Lithuania 50% of basic pension Proportional to the duration of 1) Working by licenses Mixed (50% of basic pension plus the license (in days). 2) other Self-employed 15% of declared income falling 50% of basic pension. under the insurance category) Latvia Declared income Discretionary set by the Cabinet of Ministers (in 2006 LVL1.320 equal to E 1.896) Estonia Taxable income Amount of tax calculated from the rate established by the state in the annual state budget Bulgaria Taxable income 200% of minimum wage Romania Insured income 25% of average monthly wage Croatia Taxable income 40%­110% of average wage; varying by type of self-employed Source: Fultz Elaine, Stanovnik Tine, eds. (2004). Collection of Pension Contributions: Trends, Issues, and Problems in Central and Eastern Europe. ILO 2004; Lithuania--State Social Insurance Fund Board of the Republic of Lithuania; Social protection of the self-employed, Report of European Commission, Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities Unit E.4, 2006. This problem affects in particular salaried workers. In contrast, the self-employed pay relatively low social security contributions reflecting more favorable contribution bases (Table 7). On average, the self-employed account for 10 percent of total employment in EU10+1 countries but provide only 6 percent of total social security contributions. This cross-subsidization by the salaried workers to self-employed is unfair, discourages contract employment, and undermines the financial viability of the pension systems (Table 8). Implicit Individual Internal Rate of Return6 (IRR) of the Pension Systems Expected internal rate of return of the pension system (IRR) is an important parameter for an individual facing a choice between entering the formal labor market or rather looking for 6. The internal rate of return is the interest rate corresponding to net present value of a series of pay- ments amounting to zero. The MS Excel calculates it iteratively until the result is accurate within 0.000001 percent. The rate is changed until: P N 0 = (1 i i=2 + rate ) (d - d1 ) i 365 where: di = the i-th, or last, payment date. d1 = the first payment date. Pi = the i-th, or last, payment. 16 World Bank Working Paper Table 8. Cross-subsidization of Self-employed 2003 2004 2003 2004 2003 2004 Social Contributions by Employers' Actual Employees' Social Self- and Non-employed % of Total SSC Social Contributions Contributions Persons Czech Republic 69.7 69.2 24.4 24.2 5.9 6.7 Estonia 97.3 97.4 2.7 2.6 0.0 0.0 Latvia 73.3 71.1 22.4 24.8 4.3 4.1 Lithuania 90.0 89.8 8.7 9.0 1.3 1.3 Hungary 72.5 72.4 27.1 27.0 0.5 0.6 Poland 37.1 37.6 45.0 45.9 18.0 16.5 Slovenia 38.0 38.0 52.6 52.6 9.4 9.4 Slovakia 67.4 64.8 22.2 23.6 10.5 11.6 Bulgaria 73.0 72.0 19.0 19.0 5.0 5.0 Romania 65.0 n.a. 32.9 n.a. 2.1 n.a. Croatia n.a. 0.0 n.a. 92.0 n.a. 8.0 % of Total Employment Employers Employees Self-employed Czech Republic 4.1 4.2 84.4 83.3 11.5 12.5 Estonia 2.7 2.9 92.4 91.4 4.8 5.7 Latvia 3.4 3.3 90.1 90.4 6.5 6.3 Lithuania 2.1 2.3 82.8 82.4 15.1 15.3 Hungary 5.3 5.2 86.7 87.1 8.0 7.7 Poland 4.0 4.0 76.0 76.9 20.0 19.0 Slovenia 3.7 3.3 88.3 89.6 8.0 7.1 Slovakia 2.4 2.8 91.4 90.3 6.1 6.9 Bulgaria 3.6 3.9 86.6 86.7 9.8 9.5 Romania 1.6 2.0 73.1 76.4 25.3 21.7 Croatia 5.0 5.3 78.8 78.6 16.2 16.1 Source: Eurostat; and staff calculations. a job in the informal sector. Taking into account the current pension contribution rates and assuming future gross replacement rates as computed by Whitehouse (2007), we calculated implicit IRRs for a 20-year male worker earning a national average wage during his whole work career and exiting from the labor market at the normal age of retirement7. Having this data and using the appropriate earnings measures (mostly a lifetime average) we calculated the pension levels in the first year of retirement. For pensions in the subsequent years, we applied the indexation rules as presented in Table 6 (the other necessary data and assump- tions are shown in Table 9). Under this scenario, the IRRs vary strongly across the region, with the lowest and neg- ative value in Romania (-2.33 percent), and the highest one in Hungary (1.15 percent), 7. We employed the same assumptions as in Whitehouse (2007), i.e. real wage growth of 2 percent and inflation of 2.5 percent per year. Table 9. Implicit Individual IRR of the Pension Systems in the EU10+1 Countries, 2006 Sustainability Data Czech Rep. Estonia Hungary Latvia Lithuania Poland Slovakia Slovenia Bulgaria Romania Croatia Overall pension contribution rate, 28,00 20,00 26,50 28,07 26,10 32,52 28,75 24,35 28,00 29,00 20,00 % (2006) Normal pension age (men), years 63 63 62 62 63 65 62 65 63 63 65 of Life expectancy at the retiring 15 14 15 14 14 14 15 14 14 14 13 Pension age (men), years Anticipated replacement rates 44,4% 51,6% 75,4% 58,2% 53,4% 56,9% 48,6% 44,3% 49,7% 43,7% 38,4% (Whitehouse, 2007) Systems Assumptions Real earnings growth (per year) 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% in the Price inflation (per year) 2,5% 2,5% 2,5% 2,5% 2,5% 2,5% 2,5% 2,5% 2,5% 2,5% 2,5% New Real rate of return on defined- 3,5% 3,5% 3,5% 3,5% 3,5% 3,5% 3,5% 3,5% 3,5% 3,5% 3,5% contribution pensions EU IRR 0,48% 0,04% 1,15% 0,61% 1,10% 1,50% 0,90% 0,52% 1,28% 2,33% 1,35% Member Note: The overall contribution rates include old-age, invalidity/disability, and survivors' pensions and other special contributions. In case of Estonia, IRR is overestimated because the overall pension contribution rate does not include invalidity pension (it is under overall contribution for sickness and States maternity). Source: MISSOC Database, CSOs, Eurostat; Whitehouse (2007), and staff calculations. and Croatia 17 18 World Bank Working Paper Figure 7. Pension Contribution Rates and Shares of Undeclared Work in the EU10+1 Countries 30 Bulgaria 25 GDP Romania of 20 Latvia % Hungary Slovenia Lithuania 15 Slovakia work, Poland Czech 10 Republic Estonia Undeclared 5 0 20 25 30 35 Pension contribution rate, % Source: EC (2004) for the shares of undeclared work (Croatia was not covered); CSOs; staff calculations. which is the only positive IRR in the region. However, Hungary offers the highest antici- pated replacement rate (75 percent) at a cost or a relatively high contribution rate (26.5 percent8). The IRR turned out negative but close to zero in Estonia, but it is obviously overestimated because the overall pension contribution rate does not include invalidity pension (it is under overall contribution for sickness and maternity). A negative IRR means that the investment of a "representative" individual in the pension system gener- ates a loss, i.e. she/he puts into the system more than she/he gets out of it (taking into account the value of money in time). This result is particularly visible in Romania, as it has one of the highest pension contribution rates in the region, in tandem with one of the lowest replacement rates.9 The results above indicate that in several countries it makes little sense for an indi- vidual to participate in the formal labor market, because the pension insurance either gen- erates losses (the highest in Romania, Croatia and Lithuania) or the expected returns are close to the break-even point (Estonia, Latvia, Bulgaria). This hypothesis is confirmed by the positive correlation between pension contribution rates and estimated share of unde- clared work in the economy (EC, 2004) and the negative relationship between the indi- vidual IRRs and shares of undeclared work in the EU10+1 countries (Figure 7 and Figure 8). These facts suggest a quite rational behavior of labor market participants--they refrain from legal employment because it simply does not promise them adequate returns. It also calls for a strengthening the link between pension contribution rates and future replace- ment rates. 8. From 2007 the overall pension contribution amounts to 29.5 percent. 9. The anticipated replacement rate of 43.7 percent was not taken from Whitehouse (2007), because Romania was not covered by this study, but from internal calculations of the World Bank staff. Sustainability of Pension Systems in the New EU Member States and Croatia 19 Figure 8. Implicit IRRs and Shares of Undeclared Work in the EU10+1 Countries 30 Bulgaria 25 Romania GDP of 20 Latvia % Hungary Slovenia Lithuania 15 work, Poland Slovakia 10 Czech Republic Estonia Undeclared 5 0 -3,0% -2,0% -1,0% 0,0% 1,0% 2,0% Individual rate of return Source: EC (2004) for the shares of undeclared work (Croatia was not covered); CSOs; staff calculations. Financial Solution of PAYG Systems The combination of these factors has meant that the financial situation of the PAYG systems in the EU10+1 countries has generally not improved in recent years, in some countries related to the shift of part of pension contributions to a second pension pillar (see also below). Most EU10+1 pension insurance systems (the total of the basic old-age insurance fund and the basic invalidity insurance fund) have been in deficit since the mid-1990s. During the period 2000­2004, pension insurance systems were in deficit in every year in Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, Croatia and Bulgaria although to varying degrees (Table 10). These deficits are due only in part to the introduction of new funded pillars. In Poland, a high and growing deficit in the Social Insurance Fund reflects a combination of factors, operating sometimes in opposite directions, including diversion of contributions to the second pillar since 1999, decline in the number of insured (in 2003, the number of insured was one of the lowest in the last decade), stabilization of the number of people receiving old-age and disability pensions at a high level, and an increase in the gross replacement rate to 56.7 percent in 2004, the highest level since 1998. Moreover, the grow- ing deficit includes a big gap between revenues and expenditures of the pension scheme for farmers, whose pension scheme is strongly financed from general taxes (Table 11). Similarly, Hungary has been affected by the loss of revenues diverted to the mandatory private pension schemes, but in addition to this by a reduction in overall contribution rates (PAYG plus private) by 4.5 percentage points. In contrast, in the Baltic countries, pension funds have been in surplus despite the intro- duction of second pillars reflecting rapid economic growth and buoyant social contribution revenues, better administration and control, and an increase in formal labor market partic- ipation. In Estonia, total PAYG reserves amounted to 1.4 percent of GDP at end-2004. Meanwhile, in countries that did not introduce second pension pillars, the underlying pension finances were different. In the Czech Republic, parametric changes to the basic 20 World Bank Working Paper Table 10. Social Insurance Balance, Percent of GDP Social Insurance Balance 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Czech Rep. -0.8 -0.7 -0.8 -0.6 0.3 n.a. Estonia -0.3 -0.2 -0.3 -0.3 -0.3 -0.2 Hungary -0.5 -0.9 -1.6 -1.4 -1.7 n.a. Lithuania -0.4 0.0 -0.4 0.3 0.4 n.a. Latvia -0.6 -0.2 0.0 0.3 0.7 0.5 Poland -5.4 -6.2 -6.7 -6.8 -5.2 -4.9 Slovenia -0.5 -0.2 -0.1 -0.1 -0.1 0.8 Slovakia -0.2 -0.2 -0.2 -0.2 -0.5 n.a. Bulgaria -3.2 -4.4 -3.2 -2.6 -2.4 n.a. Romania -0.6 -0.6 -0.7 0.1 n.a. n.a. Croatia -4.3 -5.4 -5.8 -5.2 -5.0 -4.7 Czech Rep.--balance of the pension insurance system; Estonia--state pension insurance bal- ance (contribution revenue--total pension expenditure); Hungary--balance of social security fund; Lithuania--balance of state social insurance fund; Latvia--state social insurance fund balance); Poland--balance of social insurance fund--FUS (contribution revenue--expenses on financial benefits from SIF) together with balance of social insurance fund for farmers (KRUS); Slovenia--balance of mandatory pension and disability insurance fund (revenue from contribu- tion--mandatory expenditure); Slovakia--balance of pension insurance (total of the balance of basic old-age insurance fund and basic invalidity insurance fund; Bulgaria--balance of social security fund; Romania--balance of pension system; Croatia--balance of the pension insurance system. Source: Social Insurance Agencies. Table 11. Financial Indicators of Agricultural Social Insurance Fund (KRUS) in Poland in 2000­05 Expeditures as Subsidy as % Subsidy as % % of GDP of GDP of Expenditures 2000 1.9 1.8 93.3 2001 2.0 1.9 94.9 2002 2.0 1.9 94.3 2003 1.9 1.8 93.1 2004 1.8 1.6 91.9 2005 1.7 1.5 87.2 Source: "Poland: Reform Options for the Agricultural Social Insurance Fund," Policy Note, The World Bank, June 2006. Sustainability of Pension Systems in the New EU Member States and Croatia 21 pension insurance scheme have eliminated the deficit for the time being.10 In Slovenia and Romania, the smaller deficits or even surpluses have been obtained in more recent years on the back of relatively higher social contribution rates that have aggravated prevailing tax wedges on labor. Experience with Second Pillar Mandatory second pillars are only beginning to mature and it is still early to assess whether they will fulfill the hopes that have been placed in them and whether the benefits they bring are commensurate with the transition costs associated with the reforms. Investment Portfolio The second pillar pension funds are administered by private asset management companies. In essence, the second pillar is an individual savings scheme, where the size of the final pen- sion depends on total contributions over the career and the rate of return of the pension fund. In 2005, private pension fund assets ranged from 8.7 percent of GDP in Poland to only 0.9 percent of GDP in Latvia. Investment portfolio managers have invested most of the entrusted funds in domestic government bonds and shares of listed companies in accor- dance with prevailing regulations (Table 12). In Poland, these two categories constituted more than 90 percent of the Open Pension Fund assets in mid-2005. The smaller EU10+1 countries have invested a larger share of savings abroad, because the domestic economies do not provide sufficient opportunity for risk diversion (Estonia and Lithuania have allowed foreign investment up to 90 percent and 81 percent, respectively). Typically, countries have initially invested a relatively large share of funds in government bonds, gradually moving to other financial instruments. Because most of the EU10+1 reforms are less than 10 years old, current asset allocations should not be viewed as evidence of either failure or success in achieving capital market development but rather as a milestone of where individual coun- tries currently stand. Transition Costs The losses in revenues to the public system are directly proportional to three parameters: the percentage of contributors who joined the new system, the percentage of contributions diverted to the second pillar, and the proportion of GDP represented by the covered wage bill. Thus, Slovakia may have only around half as many switchers (in percent of working age population) as Latvia, but its switching costs per annum are higher because in Slovakia nine percentage points of the wage bill are being diverted to the private pension funds while in Latvia it is only two percentage points (Table 13). 10. Main changes included extension of statutory retirement ages, tighter early retirement eligibility criteria, reduction in the non-contributory period related to studies, and a gradual increase of the mini- mum assessment base for the determination of pension insurance contributions for self-employed persons. 22 World Bank Working Paper Table 12. Asset Allocation of Private Pension Funds, 2004 (percent) Total Assets Bank Foreign Debt Deposits and Other Investment (% of Country Equities Securities Cash Investment total assets) Czech Rep. 5.70 81.09 9.39 3.82 36.70 Estonia 41.00 53.00 4.00 2.00 90.00 Hungary 16.39 75.02 0.83 7.76 7.90 Latvia 15.47 48.58 33.91 2.04 11.40 Lithuania 31.54 64.45 3.94 0.06 81.00 Poland 33.72 60.81 4.95 0.52 1.74 Slovakia -- -- -- -- -- Slovenia* 4.30 74.55 21.15 -- 14.08 Bulgaria** 8.12 74.00 16.48 1.4 1.24 Romania -- -- -- -- -- Croatia 15.4 77.64 3.84 3.12 9.97 *) 2003; **) 2005. Source: Pensions Supervision Authorities of respective countries. In practice, it is only in Poland, Hungary and Croatia that the diversion of resources from the PAYG pillar has reached any substantial magnitude (8.6, 5.2, and 5.6 percent of GDP, respectively). Even in those cases, most of the revenue losses have been financed by the issuance of government securities to the new pension funds, thereby limiting the new drain in the public sector (to 3.2, 1.8, and 1.5 percent of GDP, respectively for the above countries). Loss of revenues to public PAYG system (state budget) is equal to the ratio of cumulated assets held by pension funds. Net loss to the public PAYG system is equal to ratio of assets held in non-governmental financial instruments (in Table 13 we calculate both measures). The remaining transition costs have been financed in a number of different ways. In Estonia, the pension system reforms were sufficient to keep the PAYG system in surplus. Slovakia financed its initial transition costs through an increase in the contribution rate by 0.75 percent and through privatization revenues. Privatization revenues were also used to cover some of the transition costs in the case of Poland. Otherwise, transition costs have been financed mainly through borrowing. Administration Fees High administration fees in private pension funds have tended to depress the returns to con- tributors (Table 14). Most EU10+1 countries have regulated maximum permissible admin- istration fees, and these are generally applied by funds in practice as there has been little real competition so far between funds. Table 13. Switching to the Second Pillar and Revenue Losses to the PAYG System, 2005 Membership in Funded Pillar Loss in Revenues to Public System Net Loss to Public System (% of average (% of average Sustainability Funded Pillar's Number of People in Percentage of GDP from the GDP from the Existence Funded Pillar in 2005 Population (% of GDP beginning of (% of GDP beginning of Period (thousands) (age 20­64) 2005) the reform) 2005) the reform) Estonia Mandatory 2002­2005 481.3 65.8 1.52 1.82 1.44 1.72 of Voluntary 15.5 2.1 Pension Hungary Mandatory 1998­2005 2500.0 39.7 5.17 7.08 1.76 2.41 Voluntary 1300.0 20.6 Systems Latvia Mandatory 2001­2005 803.5 57.4 0.92 1.22 0.60 0.80 Voluntary 67.9 4.9 in Lithuania Mandatory 2004­2005 686.0 33.5 0.58 0.62 0.53 0.56 the Voluntary 13.0 0.6 New Poland Mandatory 1999­2005 11979.5 50.6 8.65 10.34 3.25 3.88 EU Voluntary n.a. n.a. Member Slovak Republic Mandatory 2005 1114.5 32.7 0.61 0.61 0.55 0.55 Voluntary 505.6 14.8 States Czech Republic Mandatory -- -- -- -- -- -- -- Voluntary 2963.7 45.0 and Slovenia Mandatory -- -- -- -- -- -- -- Croatia Voluntary 161.1 12.6 (continued) 23 24 World Bank Working Table 13. Switching to the Second Pillar and Revenue Losses to the PAYG System, 2005 (Continued) Paper Membership in Funded Pillar Loss in Revenues to Public System Net Loss to Public System (% of average (% of average Funded Pillar's Number of People in Percentage of GDP from the GDP from the Existence Funded Pillar in 2005 Population (% of GDP beginning of (% of GDP beginning of Period (thousands) (age 20­64) 2005) the reform) 2005) the reform) Bulgaria Mandatory 2002­2005 2422.1 50.1 1.63 1.86 0.73 0.83 Voluntary 549.9 11.4 Romania Mandatory -- -- -- -- -- -- -- Voluntary -- -- Croatia Mandatory 2002­2005 1243.3 46.0 5.61 6.36 1.15 1.20 Voluntary 47.6 1.8 Note: Czech Republic (2004). Source: Pensions Supervision Authorities of respective countries. Sustainability of Pension Systems in the New EU Member States and Croatia 25 Table 14. Regulatory Administrative Charges to Second and Third Pillar Pension Funds, 2005 Up-front Fee Management Fee Returns Fee Exit Fee (% of contributions) (% of assets) (% of returns) (% of assets) Czech Rep. 7.00 1.00 Estonia 1.60 1.50 1.00 Hungary 5.00­6.00 0.60­0.70 0.20 Latvia 1.10 Lithuania 10.00 1.00 a Poland 7.00 0.54 b c Slovakia 0.84­0.96 Slovenia 6.00 1.50 1.00 Bulgaria 5.00 1.00 d Romania 3.50 10.00 Croatia 0.80 1.20 0.00­0.80e Note: The table denotes maximum fees permissible under the law (except from Estonia). Actual fee levels may vary depending on annual ceilings and business decisions of pension companies. a. after year 2006 mobility fee is 0.2­4.0 percent of assets; b. the rate of return fee in Poland (called premium account fee) depends on relative fund performance and is subject to a maximum of 0.06 percent of assets per annum; c. applicable to members transferring assets to other pension funds before 2 years of member- ship: 160 or 80 PLN (depending on the membership period); d. the retirement insurance company may charge an additional fee not exceeding BGN 20 for each transfer of the resources accrued on the individual account from one fund to another; e. every insured person will be allowed to join another mandatory fund free of charge after three years of membership of a particular fund have expired, whereas a fee of 0.8 percent determined for switching in the first year; 0.4 percent in the second and 0.2 percent in the third year. Czech Rep. (2003); Estonia: actual fees calculated as market averages in 2004; up-front fee and exit fee are calculated from the net asset value of the unit; management fee is calculated from the total assets of a pension fund; Poland: the up-front fee is scheduled to fall to a maximum of 3.5 percent by 2014; Lithuania: actual fees amount to 1­2 percent of contributions and 1 percent of assets. Source: Presentations from Pension Restructuring in Central and Eastern Europe and Latin America: Recent Events and Trends. Sub-regional tripartite seminar of the new EU member states of EU and accession countries, ILO, 9­10 December 2004, Budapest. Returns The performance of private (second pillar) pension funds in the EU10+1 countries has been mixed so far (Table 15). In Poland, Bulgaria and Croatia, pension funds have generated rela- tively high returns, while returns have been disappointing in the Czech Republic and Hungary (an average annual real net rate of return of only 1.1 percent over the period 1996­2004 in the Czech Republic and 1.5 percent in Hungary since the inception of the new system; unweighted averages have been somewhat higher reflecting the fact that larger funds have tended to show a poorer performance). 26 World Bank Working Paper Table 15. Average Real Rate of Return on Investment of Assets in Private Pension Pillar Czech Republic non-weighted, net 1.1 1996­2004 Estonia internal real rate of return 2.6 2002­2004 Hungary non-weighted, net 2.9 1998­2004 weighted, net 1.5 Latvia internal real rate of return 1.7 2001­2004 Poland weighted 4.8 1999­2004 Slovakia non-weighted 1.8 2005 Slovenia non-weighted 0.9 2003­2004 Bulgaria weighted 5.9 2002­2004 Croatia weighted 6.6 2002­2004 Note: Rates of returns used here are real rates of return (nominal levels adjusted by the inflation rate; figures are not harmonized and may therefore not be comparable across countries. 3. pillar in the Czech Republic; 2. pillar in Hungary and Poland. *) weighted = weighted by size of assets; net = net of asset management fees. Source: Mora Marek (2005). Pension reform in the Czech Republic: ageing rapidly, reforming slowly. Country Focus vol. 2 (7) ECFIN April 2005; Orbán Gábor, Palotai Dániel (2005). The impact of the fully-funded pillar on the Hungarian pension system. Mimeo. A final version is forthcoming later this year; KNUIFE; Presentations from Pension Restructuring in Central and Eastern Europe and Latin America: Recent Events and Trends. Sub-regional tripartite seminar of the new EU member states of EU and accession countries, ILO, 9­10 December 2004, Budapest; Pensions Supervision Authorities of respective countries. CHAPTER 2 Medium-Long Term Sustainability of Pension Schemes W hatever the successes of these early efforts, considerable challenges remain. Looking ahead, the EU10+1 countries will face a significant acceleration of demographic ageing. Three major forces drive the ageing process: increasing life expectancy, low fertility rates, and finally the baby-boom generation reaching retirement age. All these factors, even in countries where the system is currently fiscally balanced, will produce a major financial challenge for pension systems over the coming decades when the number of pensioners will rapidly increase and the size of the working-age population diminish. Although net inward migration may ease the ageing process, the magnitude of potential net inflows of workers in the region is likely to be limited in view of the sensitivities involved. The population of people age 65 and above is projected to double by 2050 in several EU10+1 countries (Figure 9). Slovakia, Slovenia, Poland, and the Czech Republic would all see more or less a doubling of the number of people over the age of 65 by the middle of the century, while old-age population growth would be more modest in Hungary, Romania and the Baltic countries. Sizeable increases in this age group are projected already for 2025: in the case of the first mentioned group of countries, the group would swell by around 60 percent. As a result, the old-age dependency ratio (number of people aged 65 years and above as a percentage of people aged 15­64 years) would rise strongly in all EU10+1 countries (Figure 10). The old-age dependency ratio is projected to rise by a factor 2­2.5 in the EU10+1 countries, with the largest increases in Bulgaria, Slovenia, the Czech Republic and Poland. The process of population aging (as measured by the dependency ratio) would peak approximately 20 years later in the EU10+1 than in most other EU countries. Prospective demographic changes and population aging have raised important concerns about the sustainability of public pension systems in the EU10+1 (as in the EU in general). 27 28 World Bank Working Paper Figure 9. Population Aged 65+ Years, Percent Change Relative to 2004 EU15 Slovakia Poland Slovenia Czech Rep. Hungary Lithuania Estonia 2025 2050 Latvia Bulgaria Romania 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% 120% 140% Source: Eurostat (population projections)--Baseline scenario. Accessed from Eurostat's homepage June 26, 2006. Figure 10. Eurostat Projections of Old-age Dependency Ratio in Europe 70 2000 2025 2050 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Rep. UK Latvia Malta EU15 Italy Spain Estonia Poland Cyprus Ireland Finland France Austria Greece Lithuania Hungary Slovakia Slovenia Bulgaria Sweden Romania Croatia* Denmark Belgium Germany Portugal Czech Luxembourg Netherlands Notes: The second bar for Croatia refers to 2040 and is based on Bank staff projections. Source: Eurostat.11 11. The Eurostat projections of dependency ratios are based on assumptions concerning fertility, mor- tality, and net migration. Mortality and migration factor are fixed at "normal" levels, while alternative fer- tility assumptions are analyzed. We present the baseline scenario for total fertility. Sustainability of Pension Systems in the New EU Member States and Croatia 29 In analyzing sustainability, it is useful to decompose pension spending (as a share of GDP) into the following four factors (Equation 1 below): A dependency or population-ageing effect, reflecting changes in the ratio of those 65 years and above to working age population (65+/15­64); An employment effect, driven by changes in the ratio of employed to population aged 15­64; An eligibility effect, corresponding to changes in the share of those receiving benefits in the 65+ age group; A benefit effect, related to changes in the average pension benefit relative to GDP per worker. The last two factors measure the changing "generosity" of the pension system. Equation 1 Pension EXP 1 pensioniers = (dependency ratio × ) × × GDP employment rrate population 65 + aaverage pension benefit average productivity Note: Productivity is nominal GDP per employed. Source: based on OECD Economic Survey Spain, 2005. Table 16 extrapolates the impact of demographic projections (projected dependency ratios, discussed above) on pension expenditure assuming the other three factors would remain unchanged. The results of this very mechanical exercise illustrate the magnitude of the challenges ahead: "other things being equal", pension spending would rise by 4.1 to 14 points of GDP between 2004 and 2050. The situation would be particularly alarming in the Czech Republic, Poland, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, and Bulgaria, where pension spending would inch towards 20 percent of GDP. While the results of such a simulation need to be treated with caution (they are very mechanical exercises), they suggest that population ageing and increased dependency ratios are the key factors driving pension spending in the future. As noted above, countries have not remained inactive towards this challenge. Indeed, many have taken measures that affect the parameters of the equation. Taking these measures into account, the long-term sustainability of public finances in general and public pension systems in particular was analyzed in the 2005 updates of convergence pro- grams for the EU8 countries (Table 17).12 These projections confirm that demographic shift will put pressure on public finances by driving up ageing-related expenditure over the coming decades ("current policies" scenarios). However, there are large differences between countries. Estonia, Poland and Latvia are the only EU8 countries where the 12. All calculations were made by experts in national administrations and based on a coordinated approach, including the assumption of no change in the pension systems, taking into account last avail- able data and based on latest national or Eurostat demographic assumptions. However, despite a fair degree of consistency across the EU Member States, the projections need to be interpreted with caution as they are not completely comparable across countries because of differences in coverage. 30 World Bank Working Table 16. Old-age Pension Expenditure: Current Situation and Prospects Number of Average Pension/ Old-age Pension Paper Dependency Ratio Employment Rate Pensioners/65+ Productivity Expenditures/GDP 2004 2050 2004 2050 2004 2050 2004 2050 2004 2050 Czech Rep. 19.7 54.8 64.2 64.2 1.3 1.3 14.7 14.7 6.0 16.8 Estonia 23.8 43.1 63.0 63.0 1.3 1.3 10.0 10.0 5.1 9.2 Hungary 22.6 48.3 56.8 56.8 1.0 1.0 13.3 13.3 5.5 11.8 Latvia 23.6 44.1 62.3 62.3 1.3 1.3 11.8 11.8 5.7 10.7 Lithuania 22.3 44.9 61.2 61.2 1.2 1.2 10.2 10.2 4.3 8.7 Poland 18.6 51.0 51.7 51.7 0.8 0.8 23.1 23.1 6.4 17.5 Slovakia 16.3 50.6 57.0 57.0 1.3 1.3 13.8 13.8 5.3 16.4 Slovenia 21.4 55.6 65.3 65.3 1.0 1.0 21.6 21.6 7.3 19.1 Bulgaria 23.8 60.9 54.2 54.2 1.7 1.7 11.3 11.3 8.6 22.1 Romania 19.3 51.1 57.7 57.7 1.5 1.5 8.5 8.5 4.2 11.2 Croatia* 24.0 36.0 54.7 54.7 0.8 0.8 14.7 14.7 5.0 7.5 Note: Productivity is nominal GDP per employed. * Projections for Croatia made for 2040. The ratios of old-age pension expenditures to GDP in 2004 were calculated based on Equation 1 and may differ from actual figures. Source: Eurostat; CSOs; and staff calculations. Sustainability Table 17. Long-term Sustainability of Public Finances Age Related Expenditure Revenues Of Which: From Pension of Pensions Healthcare Total Revenues Contributions Pension 2005 2020 2050 2005 2020 2050 2005 2020 2050 2005 2020 2050 Czech Rep. 7.7 7.4 12.8 6.6 6.9 9.1 41.1 40.9 40.9 8.9 8.9 8.9 Systems Hungary 9.8 9.6 12.6 n.a. n.a. n.a. 45.3 42.4 42.4 7.6 6.2 4.6 Estonia 6.2 4.6 3.7 4.8 4.6 4.4 41.2 36.5 37.9 11.5 11.0 10.5 in Lithuania 5.7 6.0 7.7 4.2 4.5 5.0 33.5 33.0 33.0 6.7 6.1 6.1 the Poland 7.9 4.5 n.a. 4.6 3.5 3.5 n.a. n.a. 42.5 9.3 10.1 10.1 New Latvia 6.4 5 8.3 5.2 5.4 5.9 35.3 36.5 36.2 7.9 5.6 5.4 EU Slovenia 11.2 12.5 18.5 6.7 7.3 9.6 44.9 n.a. n.a. 9.9 10.9 10.9 Member Slovakia 7.2 5.3 7 4.8 5.1 6.1 37.3 36.4 36.4 13.1 12.8 12.8 (continued) States and Croatia 31 32 World Bank Table 17. Long-term Sustainability of Public Finances (Continued) Working Assumptions Participation Rate Labour Productivity (aged 20­64) Unemployment Rate Growth Real GDP Growth Paper 2005 2020 2050 2005 2020 2050 2005 2020 2050 2005 2020 2050 Czech Rep. 76.4 81.9 79.8 7.9 6.5 6.5 3.8 3.0 1.7 4.8 2.5 0.8 Hungary 55.4 59.5 59.5 7.3 6.0 6.0 4.0 3.7 2.9 4.2 3.5 2.5 Estonia 78.7 83.3 81.7 8.9 7.0 7.0 5.5 3.6 1.7 6.3 2.7 0.6 Lithuania 79.7 84.4 83.0 11.2 7.0 7.0 6.3 3.6 1.7 6.7 3.0 0.4 Poland 71.4 76.7 76.1 18.2 9.9 7.0 4.2 3.1 2.7 3.3 3.2 0.4 Latvia 78.2 84.1 82.0 9.1 7.0 7.0 6.5 4.0 1.1 8.1 2.9 0.4 Slovenia* 68.8 73.6 73.5 6.0 5.4 5.4 3.5 3.0 1.7 3.4 2.4 1.1 Slovakia 80.7 78.2 78.0 18.1 9.7 7.0 5.0 3.4 2.3 5.0 3.3 1.5 Notes: <2005 = Estonia, Hungary, and Lithuania (2000); Czech Rep. (2003); Poland (2004); Latvia and Slovenia (2005). Czech Rep.: only old-age pension (the total pension ratio amounts to 8.6 percent of GDP in 2003, 8.8 percent of GDP in 2020, and 15.2 percent of GDP in 2050). Hungary: pension expenditure of the mandatory pension insurance system including expenditure financed by the Health Insurance Fund is expected to drop from 9.3 percent of GDP in 2003 to 8.8 percent of GDP in 2050. Poland: retirement pensions (old age pension without disability and survivor). Estonia, Latvia: excluding contributions to second pillar. Lithuania: social contributions for old age pensions. Slovenia: revenue from pension (and disability) contributions. Source: Convergence Programs--Updates December 2005; National Strategy Reports on Adequate and Sustainable Pensions, 2005. Sustainability of Pension Systems in the New EU Member States and Croatia 33 share of pension spending in GDP is projected to decline despite rising old-age depen- dency ratios. Relatively stable pension expenditure levels are projected for Slovakia and Hungary, while a moderate increase is expected for Lithuania. In contrast, pension spending is projected to increase by about 5 percentage points of GDP in Slovenia and the Czech Republic, with spending on pensions in the former country potentially reach- ing 18 percent of GDP in 2050. The different outcomes for pension spending between our illustrative scenario above (Table 16) and these projections reflect alternative assumptions about the other three sub- components of Equation 1 above. Almost all EU10+1 countries assume increasing employ- ment ratios as a result of assumed higher female participation rates, lower unemployment or planned increases in average retirement ages. These effects all reduce the cost of pension systems, with the effect stronger in countries with currently low participation rates (Hungary and Poland) and/or high unemployment rates (Poland, Lithuania, and Slovakia). The pro- jections above also imply reduced generosity of pension systems in line with recent reforms, although it is not entirely clear from the projections to what extent this reflects the eligibility or the benefit effect. Nevertheless, the official projections are likely to imply declining replacement rates from the PAYG systems. Assuming, again for illustrative purposes, unchanged eligibility, we can deduct the implied change in average benefits relative to productivity (or replace- ment rates assuming that wages grow in line with productivity) using Equation 1 above (Table 18). These calculations for the EU10+1 countries show that substantial, sometimes drastic, declines in replacement rates would be needed in all countries (except Lithuania) if official targets were to be met. The prospects are particularly stark in Estonia, Bulgaria and Romania where replacement rates would need to be cut by half, to very low levels indeed. These simulations imply that important reforms would be undertaken aimed at reducing benefit rates. Reforms undertaken include shifts in pension indexation from wages toward prices (Estonia and partly Poland), and shifts toward greater linkage between contributions and benefits, including actuarial adjustment for increasing life expectancy. In Hungary, Latvia, and Slovenia--the only EU10+1 countries that provide detailed information on pension projections--lower benefits are projected to save about 2 percent of GDP by 2050. Lower replacement rates from the PAYG system may be at least partly offset by pension entitlements from the private pension funds, although not in all cases likely to be sufficient to preserve existing replacement rates (Table 19 and Figures 11 and 12). This assumes of course that private pension funds generate sufficient returns to contributors. As seen above, the recent experience suggests that this is not yet certain. 34 World Bank Working Table 18. Implied Replacement Rates (Illustrative) Number of Average Old-Age Pension Paper Dependency Ratio Employment Rate Pensioners/65+ Pension/Productivity Expenditures/GDP 2004 2050 2004 2050 2004 2050 2004 2050 2004 2050 Czech Rep. 19.7 54.8 64.2 64.2 1.3 1.3 14.7 11.2 6.0 12.8 Estonia 23.8 43.1 63.0 63.0 1.3 1.3 10.0 4.0 5.1 3.7 Hungary 22.6 48.3 56.8 56.8 1.0 1.0 13.3 8.5 5.5 7.6 Latvia 23.6 44.1 62.3 62.3 1.3 1.3 11.8 9.1 5.7 8.3 Lithuania 22.3 44.9 61.2 61.2 1.2 1.2 10.2 10.2 4.3 8.7 Poland 18.6 51.0 51.7 51.7 0.8 0.8 23.1 13.4 6.4 4.5 Slovakia 16.3 50.6 57.0 57.0 1.3 1.3 13.8 7.7 5.3 7.0 Slovenia 21.4 55.6 65.3 65.3 1.0 1.0 21.6 20.9 7.3 18.5 Bulgaria 23.8 60.9 54.2 54.2 1.7 1.7 11.3 4.4 8.6 8.6 Romania 19.3 51.1 57.7 57.7 1.5 1.5 8.5 3.2 4.2 4.2 Croatia* 24.0 36.0 54.7 54.7 0.8 0.8 14.7 9.8 5.0 5.0 Note: Projections of old age pension expenditures in 2050 for the EU8 were taken from their Convergence Programs. For Bulgaria, Romania and Croatia the projections were based on the assumption of unchanged ratio of old-age pension expenditures to GDP in 2050 as compared to 2004. Source: Eurostat; CSOs; and staff calculations. Table 19. Theoretical Replacement Rate of a Male Worker Total Net Replacement Rate Total Gross Replacement Rate Rising Earnings from Rising Earnings from At 100% Average 100% to 200% of At 100% Average 100% to 200% of Earnings Average Earnings Average 2005 2050 2005 2050 2005 2050 2005 2050 Czech Rep. 79.3 70.0 48.8 42.6 60.7 53.5 35.2 30.7 Sustainability Estonia 41.4 43.0 23.4* 31.3* 34.0 35.7 18.7* 25.1* Hungary 101.7 100.4 91.4 79.7 65.6 79.0 50.7 59.3 Latvia 77.9** 71.8 60.5** 54.5 Lithuania 41.0*** 50.0 31.3*** 42.0 of Poland 77.7 43.9 73.2 33.0 63.2 35.7 59.5 26.8 Pension Slovakia 63.1 63.7 51.5 50.6 49.4 50.2 38.2 37.7 I Pillar Gross Replacement Rate II Pillar Gross Replacement Rate Systems Rising Earnings from Rising Earnings from At 100% Average 100% to 200% of At 100% Average 100% to 200% of in Earnings Average Earnings Average the 2005 2050 2005 2050 2005 2050 2005 2050 New Czech Rep. 60.7 53.5 35.2 30.7 - - - - EU Estonia 34.2 16.8 18.7* 10.9* 0.0 18.9 0.0* 14.2* Member Hungary 65.6 58.5 50.7 43.9 0.0 20.5 0.0 15.3 Latvia 60.5** 54.5 - - States Slovakia 49.4 50.2 38.2 37.7 0.0**** 0.0**** 0.0**** 0.0**** With a career length of 40 years full-time work at average earnings with contributions to first and second pillar pension schemes retiring at the age of 65. and *at 200 percent average earnings. Croatia **2010. ***2004. ****Pillar II, represents, in the ISG methodology, the mandatory occupational pension security, which plays only a marginal role in the Slovak Republic and is therefore not considered in the calculations. National calculations according to the method determined by the Indicators Sub-Group of the Social 35 Protection Committee. Second pillar replacement rate depends on assumed net real rate of return. Source: National Strategy Reports on Adequate and Sustainable Pensions, 2005. 36 World Bank Working Paper Figure 11. Projected Average Replacement Rate for Old-Age Pensioners in Romania (Percent of Average Wage) Source: World Bank (2004), "The Pension System in Romania: The Challenges of Pursuing an Integrated Reform Strategy." Figure 12. Projected Replacement Rates in Croatia 2000­40. Source: Anusic, Madzarevic-Sujster, and O'Keefe (2003), "Pension Reform in Croatia." Social Protection Discussion Paper, World Bank, February. CHAPTER 3 Conclusions R eforms in recent years have improved the efficiency and sustainability of pension systems in all EU10+1 countries, but in many probably not enough to ensure long- term sustainability given prospective population aging. Reforms have included parametric changes to PAYG systems, including increases in retirement ages (not least for women), changing benefit formulas, and changing indexation mechanisms. Some countries (Latvia and Poland) have further strengthened the link between contributions and bene- fits and sustainability of the PAYG system through the introduction of notional defined contribution accounts. Link between contributions and benefits is also strengthened by moving to point system which many of the countries have done. Several countries have further introduced a second, private pension pillar, funded through diversion of part of the pension contributions to this pillar, thus diversifying risk. However, some countries (in particular, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, and Romania) will need to do more to safe- guard the long-term viability of their pension systems, and others face ongoing and future challenges in ensuring equitable pension systems and adequate living standards for all elderly people. Further reforms efforts need to be tailored to individual country circumstances, but could include some combination of: 1) Further parametric reforms to PAYG systems, particularly adjustment of retirement ages in line with increases in life expectancy and move toward greater reliance on indexation of pensions to inflation rather than wages. 2) Further strengthening the link between contributions and benefits to change the perception of contributions as taxes in most countries, and minimize the wealth redistribution within the pension system. 37 38 World Bank Working Paper 3) Consideration of gradual equalizing of retirement age for men and women to avoid discrimination of women on the labor market and ensure a proper level of their future benefits, as their life expectancy in longer. 4) More equal treatment of salaried and self-employed workers. 5) Reduction in special retirement privileges for certain groups of workers (farmers, miners, and so forth) and review of disability pensions. 6) Further labor-market reforms, including tax and benefit systems, aimed at increas- ing labor force participation and employment, including among older workers and women. 7) General fiscal consolidation and reduction in public debt levels to make room for aging-related spending increases (especially in high-debt countries). 8) Consideration of greater reliance on general taxes (rather than pension contributions) to finance basic pensions in order to support lower labor taxes and employment gen- eration (but caution needed to avoid unaffordable reductions in contribution rates). 9) Encourage greater competition between private pension funds to reduce fees and broaden investment opportunities for these while maintaining adequate prudential regulation. In considering these options, EU10+1 countries may want to closely study the experience of Latin American countries that have implemented comprehensive pension reforms and the challenges they have faced (including in terms of coverage, fund performance, and governance). Also, lessons may be learned from EU15 countries that finance their pension systems mainly from general taxes (for example, the United Kingdom, Ireland, and Denmark) and appear to have been relatively successful in containing pension spending compared to countries that rely on social security contributions (for example, Germany, Italy, France, and Austria). References Annual Reports of State Supervisions in Insurance and Pension Funds. 2005. Anusic, Zoran, Sanja Madzarevic-Sujster, and Philip O'Keefe. 2003. "Pension Reform in Croatia." Social Protection Discussion Paper, The World Bank. European Commission. 2004. Undeclared work in an enlarged Union: An Analysis of Un- declared Work: An In-Depth Study of Specific Items. Brussels. ------. 2005. Convergence Programmes of EU8 countries. Updated 2005. ------. 2006. Social protection of the self-employed. Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities Unit E.4. European Commission and the Council. 2006. Adequate and sustainable pensions. Synthesis report. Fultz, Elaine, and Tine Stanovnik, eds. 2004. Collection of Pension Contributions: Trends, Issues, and Problems in Central and Eastern Europe. ILO. Golias, Peter. 2005. Pension Reform in Slovakia. INEKO. ILO. 2004. "Pension Restructuring in Central and Eastern Europe and Latin America: Recent Events and Trends." Sub-regional tripartite seminar of the new EU member states of EU and accession countries, December 9­10, Budapest. International Social Security Association. 2004. Social Security Programs Throughout the World: Europe 2004. Mora, Marek. 2005. "Pension reform in the Czech Republic: ageing rapidly, reforming slowly." Country Focus 2(7). National Strategy Report on Adequate and Sustainable Pensions. 2005. Orbán, Gábor, and Dániel Palotai. 2005. "The impact of the fully-funded pillar on the Hungarian pension system." Processed. Palacios Robert, and Montserrat Pallarčs-Miralles. 2000. "International Patterns of Pension Provision." Social Protection Discussion Paper No. 0009, World Bank. 39 40 World Bank Working Paper Statistical Yearbooks, National Statistical Offices, 2005. UNDP. 2005. Human Development Report 2005. Wagner, Helmut. 2004. Pension Reform in the New EU Member States--Will a 3-Pillar Pension System Work? Discussion Paper No. 372. Whitehouse, Edward. 2007. Pensions Panorama: Retirement-Income Systems in 53 Countries. Washington, D.C.: The World Bank. World Bank. 2004. "The Pension System in Romania: The Challenges of Pursuing an Integrated Reform Strategy." November. ------. 2005. "Bulgaria, Croatia and Romania. Economic report." World Bank Staff Working Paper, August. ------. 2006. "Poland: Reform Options for the Agricultural Social Insurance Fund." Policy Note, June. Eco-Audit Environmental Benefits Statement The World Bank is committed to preserving Endangered Forests and natural resources. We print World Bank Working Papers and Country Studies on 100 percent postconsumer recy- cled paper, processed chlorine free. The World Bank has formally agreed to follow the rec- ommended standards for paper usage set by Green Press Initiative--a nonprofit program supporting publishers in using fiber that is not sourced from Endangered Forests. For more information, visit www.greenpressinitiative.org. In 2007, the printing of these books on recycled paper saved the following: Trees* Solid Waste Water Net Greenhouse Gases Total Energy 264 12,419 96,126 23,289 184 mil. * Pounds Gallons Pounds CO2 Equivalent BTUs 40" in height and 6-8" in diameter Sustainability of Pension Systems in the New EU Member States and Croatia is part of the World Bank Working Paper series. These papers are published to communicate the results of the Bank's ongoing research and to stimulate pub- lic discussion. This study finds that pension reforms in recent years have improved the efficiency and sustainability of pension sys- tems in the new member states of the European Union and Croatia. However, for many countries, these probably have not gone far enough to ensure long-term sustainability, given the aging of the population. Reforms have included changes to Pay-As-You-Go (PAYG) systems, including increases in retirement ages (not least for women), new benefit formulas, and new indexation mechanisms. Some countries (Latvia and Poland) have further strengthened the link of contributions and benefits to the sustainability of the PAYG system through the introduction of notional defined contribution accounts. The link is strengthened also by mov- ing to a point system, which has been adopted by many of the countries. Several countries have introduced a second, private, pension pillar, funded through diversion of part of the pension contributions, thereby diversifying risk. However, some countries (in particular the Czech Republic, Slovenia, and Romania) will need to do more to safeguard the long-term viability of their pension systems, while oth- ers face challenges to ensure equitable pension systems and adequate living standards for all elderly people. World Bank Working Papers are available individually or on standing order. Also available online through the World Bank e-Library (www.worldbank.org/elibrary). 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