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Gaps in pension systems in the Asia-Pacific region and lessons learnt Symposium on Old-Age Income Security and Universal Basic Income in South Asia New Delhi, 27 February 2017 Vanessa Steinmayer Chief, Sustainable Demographic Transition Section, Social Development Division, ESCAP

Gaps in pension systems in the Asia-Pacific region and lessons … · 2017-03-02 · New Delhi, 27 February 2017 Vanessa Steinmayer Chief, ... Creating trustin the system ... particularly

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Page 1: Gaps in pension systems in the Asia-Pacific region and lessons … · 2017-03-02 · New Delhi, 27 February 2017 Vanessa Steinmayer Chief, ... Creating trustin the system ... particularly

Gaps in pension systems in the Asia-Pacific region and lessons learnt

Symposium on Old-Age Income Security and Universal Basic Income in South Asia

New Delhi, 27 February 2017

Vanessa SteinmayerChief, Sustainable Demographic Transition

Section, Social Development Division, ESCAP

Page 2: Gaps in pension systems in the Asia-Pacific region and lessons … · 2017-03-02 · New Delhi, 27 February 2017 Vanessa Steinmayer Chief, ... Creating trustin the system ... particularly

Coverage is very low - in South Asia even lower than in East and South-East Asia

Pension systems tend to perpetuate existing inequalities

Women have only limited access to pension systems

Key messages on current pension systems in the Asia-Pacific region

Page 3: Gaps in pension systems in the Asia-Pacific region and lessons … · 2017-03-02 · New Delhi, 27 February 2017 Vanessa Steinmayer Chief, ... Creating trustin the system ... particularly

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

Percentage of older persons receiving a contributory pension

In many countries, only a small proportion of older persons receive a contributory pension

Page 4: Gaps in pension systems in the Asia-Pacific region and lessons … · 2017-03-02 · New Delhi, 27 February 2017 Vanessa Steinmayer Chief, ... Creating trustin the system ... particularly

DB or DC?• Only few countries in the Asia-Pacific region have

redistributional elements in the pension schemes (China,Republic of Korea, Philippines)

• Republic of Korea, Philippines, Thailand and Viet Nam havedefined benefit schemes – but sustainable issues

• Many other countries have defined contribution schemesor privatized defined contribution schemes

• DC schemes can be compared to forced saving schemeso They are strictly speaking not to be subsumed under social

insuranceo Returns depend on investment returns – can be quite low, such

as in the case of Malaysiao Sustainability not always guaranteed!

Page 5: Gaps in pension systems in the Asia-Pacific region and lessons … · 2017-03-02 · New Delhi, 27 February 2017 Vanessa Steinmayer Chief, ... Creating trustin the system ... particularly

Often, more than 50% of beneficiaries of contributory pensions are among the richest

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Richest Quintile

4th Quintile

3rd Quintile

2nd Quintile

Poorest Quintile

Source: ESCAP calculations from World Bank, ASPIRE Database

Page 6: Gaps in pension systems in the Asia-Pacific region and lessons … · 2017-03-02 · New Delhi, 27 February 2017 Vanessa Steinmayer Chief, ... Creating trustin the system ... particularly

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Total Women

Women at working age less likely to be covered by (mandatory) contributory pensions

Page 7: Gaps in pension systems in the Asia-Pacific region and lessons … · 2017-03-02 · New Delhi, 27 February 2017 Vanessa Steinmayer Chief, ... Creating trustin the system ... particularly

Lessons learned from select countries in the Asia-Pacific region

Republic of Korea: national pension introduced late compared to other OECDcountries – high poverty of rates of older persons; reforms in 2014 to provide abasic income for all older persons to address poverty – but financial challengesChina: very quick roll-out of contributory pension system – now coverage almost90% - first priority was on coverage; incentives for contributions created: benefitsalready after 15 years of contributions or when child(ren) contributesFiji: Membership in Provident Fund is compulsory for public and formal privatesector since 1966; relatively good coverage, but Provident Fund itself does notprovide income security in old-age because of lump-sum withdrawalsSri Lanka: in an effort to cover the informal sector including fishermen or migrantworkers, a number of small pension funds created, overall low coverage –sustainability of each pension fund is at stake, only small benefits – overallcoverage still lowMalaysia: Non-contributory pensions for public sector employees (increasingbudgetary burden) and provident fund for formal private sector – overall coveragearound 60% of the labour force – low compared to other countries of similarincome; relatively low benefits, no annuity for formal private sector

Page 8: Gaps in pension systems in the Asia-Pacific region and lessons … · 2017-03-02 · New Delhi, 27 February 2017 Vanessa Steinmayer Chief, ... Creating trustin the system ... particularly

Key challenges in South AsiaThe key challenge: extending coverage!

Creating trust in the system

Covering the informal sector – are contributory pensions the right instrument?

Introducing re-distributionary elements, particularly for women into the pension system

Designing contributory pensions in a way to keep reasonable replacement rates while having re-distributionary elements

The challenge of reforms: political and financial feasibility

Page 9: Gaps in pension systems in the Asia-Pacific region and lessons … · 2017-03-02 · New Delhi, 27 February 2017 Vanessa Steinmayer Chief, ... Creating trustin the system ... particularly

Thank you!