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The European Union Studies Center

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Title: The European Union Studies Center


1
Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • The European Union Studies Center
  • The Graduate Center, CUNY
  • European Union Center of New York
  • EUSC Lecture Series 2008

Toward the Limits of Sustainable Welfare Bernd
Marin European Centre Vienna CUNY Graduate
Center, Skylight Conference Room February 14,2008
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The UN-European Region
3
Longevity, Ageing, Rejuvenation
  • Longevity does not imply ageingVienna 1995 -
    2012 as a case in point
  • Individual longevity, collective ageing - and
    collective rejuvenation
  • Different forms of increasing life expectancy
  • Chronological, socio-cultural, psychological,
    biometric and prospective age

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Longevity 1960-2000 From Convergence To
Divergence ?
7
Why doe we currently age only 2 years within 3
years time?
  • Most recent gains in life expectancy 1995 - 2005

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Further Cohort-Specific Life Expectancy at Age 65
by Generations (Austria 2005)
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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Sustaining Unsustainable
  • Out-of-Work Patterns
  • Extending Working Life (EWL) as an unachieved
    policy goal
  • Widespread though not universal failure in UNECE
    region, single dimension of regress even since
    2002 in some MS
  • First small EWL achievements much behind
    increased longevity and population ageing
    reqirements
  • First small turnarounds between 1993 and 2001,
    but activity levels still far below 1970s/1980s -
    and far below Lisbon, Stockholm, Barcelona
    targets and MIPAA / RIS Madrid / Berlin
    commitments

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Sustaining Unsustainable
  • Out-of-Work Patterns
  • Age exclusion or ongoing reduction of working
    life - both in relative (lifetime allocation) and
    absolute terms (work years)
  • Age exclusion is generally considered
    unacceptable, undesirable, unfeasible, and
    unsustainable
  • Prevailing facts ever later labour market entry,
    much earlier workforce exit, ever tighter
    compression of working life during early / middle
    adult or prime age 25-54 - contradicting both
    ageing and longevity
  • Reducing active working lifetimes, mass early
    exit, age discrimination and forced retirement
    not yet stopped

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Predominance of non-working status during
    lifetimes majorities of - adult - resident
    populations out-of-work
  • Widespread predominance of household (non-SNA)
    production over market (SNA) production, of
    unpaid work over paid work
  • Massive labour slack (inactivity or
    non-employment, unemployment and long-term
    unemployment, long-term sickness and invalidity)
    among the main barriers to more UN-European
    economic growth, competitive-ness, prosperity and
    rising living standards for all ages
  • Massive out-of-work patterns also main barrier to
    social integration and cohesion, health, mental
    health and well-being, happiness and life
    satisfaction

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Inactivity or non-employment - not unemploy-ment
    - as the single most significant component of
    labour slack or out-of-work status
    (non-em-ployment 5 times higher than
    unemployment)
  • Above the age of 50, the ratio of non-employed to
    unemployed increases to 18 and rises even more
    sharply with age, as the risk of disability and
    other forms of early exit increases while the
    risk of unemployment decreases (!)
  • For the mature or post-prime-age group 55-64
    non-employment is 30 times higher than
    unemployment (10 times for men, up to 90 times
    for women).(E.g. in Austria, Italy, Hungary,
    Slovakia, Belgium 81-89 non-employment vs.
    0.3-1.5 unemployment)
  • Unemployment - considered to be a major problem
    in public discourse - is disproportionally low in
    the age group 55 - 64

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • The end of the demographic bonus -
    periodization for EU-27 and a majority of UNECE
    member states
  • 2007 - 2011 last window of opportunity for
    structural reforms
  • 2012 - 2017 population of working age starts
    shrinking, but rising employment - and
    immigration - may temporarily offset this trend
    (required LF immigration 2-9 times the numbers
    projected?)
  • After 2018 ageing effect will become dominant
    throughout region
  • Projected economic growth to shrink significantly
    - and to be driven by innovation and
    productivity, not employment growth after 2018
  • High intra-regional UNECE diversity in starting
    conditions and RIS implementation

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When will the Ageing Process Reach its Peak?
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Living Longer,Working Shorter? End of the
demographic bonus/2
  • Employment increase projected mainly through
    cohort effects - only marginally through pension
    reforms (e.g. rising LFP rates 50 and
    simultaneously falling effective or actual
    retirement age)
  • Employment increase indispensable but
    insufficient impact on pensions
  • Highly different longevity achievements (up to 20
    years in life expectancy), ageing paces and
    timing (up to 30 years time lag country
    differences in baby boom timing and respective
    ageing peaks) in UNECE region
  • By conclusion diverging adjustment requirements
    and corresponding policy time frames between
    early movers and laggards in universal population
    ageing

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Determinants of Early Exit
  • Pre-Retirement / 1
  • The reluctance of employers to hire and retain
    older workers
  • Age discrimination and negative attitudes towards
    older workers
  • Steep age-wage profile outpacing productivity
    increases over the working life
  • Strict job protection may fire back as hiring and
    retaining barrier
  • Insufficient training and life-long learning to
    compensate for de-skilling weaking employability
  • Widespread preferences for leisure early exit
    have emerged

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Determinants of Early Exit
  • Pre-Retirement / 2
  • Inadequate placement services weakening
    employability
  • Poor, unsafe and unhealthy work environment and,
    above all, demoralizing working conditions
    explain most of early exit
  • Morale much more important than health respect,
    esteem, basic flexicurity and quality work - or a
    lack of - are more important than health, work
    load and stress, pay and other economic rewards,
    pension incentives, etc.
  • Work environment more important than employment,
    employment and non-employment more than
    unemployment, pension rules and work satisfaction
    more than health

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Some Policy Conclusions
  • Making work pay through fairness and actuarial
    neutrality
  • (or even increasing pension rights with age)
  • Lifetime indexing linking work and pension
    duration to life expectancy (analoguous to
    pension indexation to inflation)
  • Increasing opportunities and choices for flexible
    retirement
  • Repealing early retirement options and pathways
  • Combatting age discrimination and eradicating
    forced retirement
  • Changing employer attitudes and practices by
    eliminating employment barriers and improving
    employability

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Some Good Practices / 1
  • Guiding Principles work first, making work
    pay, raising overall, in particular post-prime
    age employment rates, lifetime indexing, fighting
    age discrimination and forced retirement
  • Lifelong education Occupational
    training
  • Work safety Health promotion
  • Professional Job rotation,
  • rehabilitation upgrading, and
    enrichment
  • Late career measures Mobility support
  • Age-specific adustments Personal (family) of
    the work environment time-off
  • Lifetime banking accounts
  • Partial pension schemes Phased, flexible
    retirement schemes

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Some Good Practices / 2
  • Adjusting legal and first eligibility retirement
    age to rising (residual) life expectancy
  • Restrictions on early exit pathways and
    disability pension awards outpacing disability
    prevalence patterns
  • Introducing or strengthening actuarial
    adjustments in order to encourage later
    retirement
  • Improving the terms for delaying retirement by
    increasing accrual rates beyond certain ages
    beyond actuarial neutrality

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Some Innovative Good Practices 3
  • Lifetime Indexing automatic adjustment of early,
    normal, and reference retirement age to rising
    survival rates, prospective age, residual life
    expectancy and / or disability-free, healthy life
    expectancy
  • Experience rating or age-risk rating of social
    security contributions over the entire life
    cycle, making the compound non-employment and
    unemployment risk by age the yardstick for
    differentiating all social security contributions
    according to age-specific (and other major)
    out-of-work risks
  • Tax credits or subsidies for recruiting or
    retaining post-prime-age (mature) workers.
  • All measures need to be experimented with and
    rigorously evaluated.

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Some Good Practices To Dos / 4
  • Fully integrate foreign-born residents and
    citizens who may significantly differ in their
    work and retirement behaviour.
  • Promote self-employment self-employed, small
    shop-keepers, and liberal professions work
    several years and up to decades longer than waged
    workers and employees. Assisting the transition
    to self-employment for middle-aged employees
    could be a major step towards effectively
    extending active working life.
  • Pension rules should always be universal, fully
    transparent, fair. Corporatist privileges are
    costly, demoralizing, and legitimize resistance
    to change and reform. Pension justice must not
    only be done, but also seen to be done.

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Quality Work andSelf-Employment asEarly Exit
Immunizers?
43
Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Some Proposals for Future Monitoring / 5
  • Establish regular long-term national
    sustainability and Monitoring RIS reports (e.g. 5
    year intervals with review and appraisal cycles)
  • Establish regular long-term joint UNECE
    sustainability and Monitoring RIS reports
  • Externally assess, corraborate or question
    national and UN-European reports
  • Discuss discrepancies between EUROCOM, OECD, IMF,
    World Bank, UNECE, European Centre Vienna and
    academic assessments, synchronise databases and
    test models externally
  • One best guess projections vs. stochastic
    forecast modelling and quantifying demographic
    uncertainties, in particular sensitivity analyses
    on longevity gains

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Some Bad Practices Not To Dos / 1
  • When it comes to early exit basic social safety
    nets, never confuse old age security (which can
    by definition apply above working age only) with
    unemployment, accident, work injury, sickness,
    invalidity insurance, disability benefits etc.
  • Never (ab)use pension policies for labour market
    - or any other supposedly good - purposes
  • Never award lifelong disability pensions
    instead of temporary benefits
  • Never allow for special pension schemes for
    special interest groups (regimen speciales,
    however strong their corporatist pressure or
    noble the causes underlying their claims)

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Some Bad Practices
  • Not To Dos / 2
  • Do not any longer allow for different retirement
    age by gender (i.e. do not longer ignore the
    European Court of Justice rulings)
  • Do not give an unlimited autonomy or veto power
    to social partners regarding retirement practices
    and the implementation of pension schemes
  • Do not be generous to early retirees as such as
    it will force you to be non-solidaristic or less
    generous to the poor, to sick people, to persons
    with disabilities and all others disadvantaged
    and in need - thus, order your generosity
    priorities.

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Some Practices / Institutionsto Rethink?
  • Just for thought Could EU-27 within UNECE-Europe
    56 remain the only (con)federation worldwide
    without converging labour markets, social
    security, social protection and pension systems ?
    Not only without unitary and harmonized
    institutions, but even without easy portability
    of social rights? (in contrast to to the US,
    Canada, Australia, Russia, China, India and
    Brazil)

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Some Remaining Uncertainties / 1
  • How to fairly and effectively differentiate
    eligibility ages of earnings-related vs.
    guaranteed minimum pensions ?(the latter
    available many years later than the former ?)
  • How to make work-retirement decisions more
    flexible and widen corridors (age spans in which
    one is entitled to retire) without encouraging
    ever earlier exit ?
  • How can collective bargaining agreements be
    prevented from fixing mandatory retirement age
    for specific occupati-onal groups (pilots,
    military, railway, opera singers, ballet dancers,
    bull-fighters, etc.) below the legal one ?

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Some Remaining Uncertainties / 2
  • How can the outflow rates for the two-digit
    millions of people on disability benefits be
    increased from currently less than 1 ?
  • Who should be supported in order to create the
    most effective work incentives, and how can it be
    guaranteed that simple age-targeting will not
    miss ist goals ?
  • How can age discrimination legislation be made
    more effective ?
  • Why has the great majority of governments from
    UNECE member states still not yet implemented a
    ban on mandatory, forced retirement ? What are
    existing plans to do so within what time frame?
    And if not, why ??

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Public Opinion Poll
  • Survey Findings / 1
  • A vague sense of problems and doubts about the
    future viability of mandatory systems
  • Little confidence in government policies
  • Largely unchanged attitudes regarding current
    retirement practices and little popular support
    for rising pension age
  • Widespread belief in lump-of-labour fallacy
    that elderly workers should give up work to make
    way for younger and unemployed
  • In countries such as Denmark, Finland, Ireland,
    the Netherlands, the UK public awareness and
    sensitivity has been raised by governmental
    campaigns to undo the lump-of-labour myth

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Living Longer, Working Shorter?
  • Public Opinion Poll
  • Survey Findings / 2
  • A growing opposition to forced retirement at any
    age fixed for all (with great differences between
    the North-Western and the South-Eastern parts of
    the UNECE region)
  • Broadest support for contributory conceptions of
    social justice (including the view that later
    retirement should lead to higher pension and that
    pensioners should be allowed to earn freely on
    top of their pension)

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