Title: Public pension restructuring: The Czech Pension Reform
1Public pension restructuring The Czech Pension
Reform
- Jirà Král
- Director of Social Insurance Department
- MLSA, Czech Republic
- Ljubljana, November 4, 2002
-
2Content
- I. Basic Information
- II. History of the Reform
- III. Current Problems of the I.Pillar
- IV. Description and Problems of the III.Pillar
- V. Reform Targets
3I. Basic Information
4Real value of GDP, average wage and pensions
5Average life expectancy
6Population and pensioners
7Basic Information
- I.pillar
- (mandatory, DB, PAYG, uniform for all EA,
Old-age I Surv.) -
- Contribution Rate 26
- Compliance 98,4
- Number of pensioners 2 584 000
- Replacement Ratio 43,4
- Expenditures 9,1 of GDP
- Flat rate (1/5) Earnings related (4/5)
- 30 years assesment base indexed by average wage
- Benefits adjusted according to prices partly
wages
8Basic Information
- Private pensions
- (voluntary, FF, DC plans only, state
contribution tax incentives) - Number of pension funds 13
- Number of participants 2 500 000
- Average contribution 340 CZK
- Pension fund assets 2.6 of GDP
- Average real rate of return lt 1
9Basic Information
- Life insurance
- Number of insurance companies gt 30
- Number of participants (contracts)
- Life insurance 6 200 000
- Pension insurance with tax incentives 2 100 000
- Assets 100 billion CZK
- Average annual contribution 3600 CZK
10II. The History of the Czech Pension
ReformCountry of Non-reform ?
11The History of the Reform (1)
- 1990 92
- Abolishment of preferences in I. Pillar.
- Reform of institutional framework.
- 1993
- Introduction of pension insurance contributions
(I.pillar). - 1994
- Introduction of the voluntary supplementary
scheme with state subsidy.
12The History of the Reform (2)
- 1995
- Pension Insurance Act
- change in conditions of benefits, increasing of
assesment base, change in benefit formula,
retirement ages, restrictions in invalidity, EU
harmonisation, etc. - 1997
- Tightening up pension indexation and reduction in
non contributory period.
13The History of the Reform(3)
- 1999
- Amendment of Supplementary scheme higher
security of assets and introduction of tax
incentives. - 2000
- Establishment of pension reform commitee in the
Parliament. - The draft of the Social Insurance Agency law
(rejected by the Parliament on 31.10.2001).
14The History of the Reform(4)
- 2001
- The Governmental concept of the continuation of
pension reform (4/2001). - Changes in early and deferred pensions
(1.7.2001). - Amendment of the Supplementary scheme law (the
draft was returned in 10/2001 to the Government). - Occupational Pension Scheme Law (rejected by the
Parliament in 11/2001). - Result of the Parliament committee activity 5
parties with 5 opinions.
15Next Steps (5)
- 2002
- Joint Memorandum for Barcelona EU Summit.
- Annual adjustment of pensions (prices and wages).
- Priorities of the new Government
- 1. In PAYG Scheme
- - More equity
- - Separation from the state budget
- 2. More security and choices in private
arrangements
16III. Current Problems of the I.pillar
17New Factors after 1995
- The economic recession
- decrease of GDP in real terms in 1997 - 1999
- The level of unemployment
- increase from 4 in 1996 to 9 in 1999
- The demographic development
- permanent, not short-term as it was expected in
the first half of 90-ties, changes in fertility
and mortality after 1990
18Weaknesses of the I. Pillar Scheme
- Real value of pensions is still under value in
1989 - Low diferenciation (low equivalence)
- Increasing in dependency ratio due to aging
- Large extent of non-contributory periods
- Only one source financing (only contributions)
- Self-employed
- Quality of the administrator (CSSA)
19Development of the Replacement Rate (1989-2001)
20Replacement Rate in relation to earning
For pensions after 1996
21The Development of Pensions Revenues and
Expenditures I.pillar
) estimate
Source MF
22 Ratio of Old-Age Pension Expenditures to GDP
(1997, in )
Source OECD, Annual report 2000-2001,
Switzerland.
23Demographic Development (1950 - 2050)
24Specific Factors influencing the Czech Pension
Reform
- Tradition and relatively high level of the social
security administration - The preparness in 1990 decessive role of local
experts - The leading role of MLSA
- The low dept of the country and limited influence
of international financial institutions - The failures of almost all segments of financial
markets - Quick privatisation and its problems
- Unclear position of political parties and the
fact that pension reform has not become the
political priority - The development of democracy
25IV. Description and Problems of the III.pillar
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28status as at December 31, 2001
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33Average Real Rate of Return in 1995 2001
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36Weaknesses of the Supplementary Scheme
- Not in full compliance with EU legislation
- Rational occupational pension scheme doesnt
exist - Insufficient safety of assets
- Insufficient economic transparency due to
inconsistent separation of pension funds and
shareholders assets - 5. High administrative cost especially due to
the - individual character of the system
- 6. Short-time character of the scheme
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37V. The Reform Targets
38The Reform Targets (1)(Concept approved by the
Government 2.4.2001)
- Trustful system
- Protection of pensioners standard of living
- Development of the best tradition of the Czech
social insurance - intergeneration solidarity (pay as you go)
- suitable intrageneration solidarity
39The Reform Targets (2)
- Strenghtening of individual responsibility
- Effective and rational administration
- Financial sustainability
- Following of the EU standards and policies
- Creating of the flexible system enabling further
development
40Principles which are Not the Priority Targets
- To privatise the basic pension scheme
- To increase the national savings
- To improve financial and capital markets
41Target Design of the Pension Scheme
42Thank you for your attention