Title: Occupational Pensions
1Occupational Pensions
- Their role towards financial stability and
changing social needs
Karel Noordzy, PGGM, Chairman of the Board of
Managing Directors Prague, March 7, 2005
2Agenda
- Sharing the Dutch experience
- Three significant characteristics
- The key functions of our system
3Definitions
Sharing the Dutch experience
4The Dutch mix of pension payments
Sharing the Dutch experience
5Introducing PGGM I
Sharing the Dutch experience
- Occupational pensions for Dutch health care
sector - Defined benefit
- Fully funded
- Assets 60 billion euro
- 4th in Europe, 2nd in the Netherlands
- Annual premium income 3 billion euro
- Active participants 1.1 million
- Pensioners 0.2 million
- Sleepers 0.6 million
6Introducing PGGM II
Sharing the Dutch experience
- Employment based
- Participants must have job in health care
- Paritarian governance
- Employees and employers in Board of Governors
- High solidarity
- e.g. young/old, men/women, healthy/sick
- Long term investment horizon
- Great investment results
- 8.6 p.a. over 10 years, 8.9 p.a. over 30 years
- No investment restrictions
7Introducing PGGM III
Sharing the Dutch experience
- Our target high quality DB pension at low cost
- For employees and employers
- Target pension (including State) at 65 70 (100
after tax) - Possible because
- Fully funded
- High solidarity
- Trust is key
- State fair deal, consistent policy
- Occupational pension promise kept
- Private contract fulfilment
8Sufficient trust in C. E. Europe?
Sharing the Dutch experience
- State system low pensions at high budgetary cost
- Remnants of very expensive old system
- Individual accounts not a solution
- Virtually no occupational pensions
- Employers still building up strength
- Trade unions focused on state system
- Private pensions costly and risky
- Quantitative restrictions
- Lack of education and information
- Lack of choice of providers and funds
Source Pragma Consulting
9Agenda
- Sharing the Dutch experience
- Three significant characteristics
- The key functions of our system
101. Balancing fully funded and PAYGO
Three significant characteristics
- Advantages PAYGO (State system)
- Not sensitive to financial markets
- Immediate high payments possible
- Usually very high level of solidarity
- Advantages fully funded (Occupational)
- Not very sensitive to demographic developments
- Off-budget risk of deficit (or surplus)
- Potentially high level of solidarity
- Development national financial sector
- Our experience diversify risk by including both
11Balancing also antidote against greying
Three significant characteristics
(Source Börsch-Supan, 2004)
122. Defined Benefits is fairest
Three significant characteristics
- Bear risk collectively, not individually
- Investment risk
- Conversion risk
- Take decisions by professionals, not individuals
- Build trust, minimize reputation risk
- What happens if a DC pension falls short?
- Enterprise guarantees pension or reputation risk
- Government fails to provide basic social service
- Enhance participation
- Our experience promote defined benefits
133.Solidarity makes bigger return possible
Three significant characteristics
143. Solidarity has other advantages
Three significant characteristics
- Increased predictability
- Lower liquidity needed
- Better investment mix
- Higher returns
- Fair division of unexpected costs and benefits
- Pension arrangement
- Contribution rate
- Indexation
- Our experience use all political support for
solidarity
15Occupational pensions can deliver
Three significant characteristics
- A better balanced system
- Less PAYGO, more fully funded
- Defined benefits
- A considerable degree of solidarity, which means
- Lower cost
- Higher benefits
16Agenda
- Sharing the Dutch experience
- Three significant characteristics
- The key functions of our system
17Solidarity requires trust
The key functions of our system
- Political choice
- How much freedom to fail?
- How much risk to take?
- Independent supervision
- Mindful of risks (solvability) as well as returns
- Well informed, equipped with enough power
- Return guarantees create moral hazard
- Transparency
- Inspiring trust
- Our experience let the system be its own
guarantee
18Solidarity must be organized
The key functions of our system
- Tackling the free rider problem
- Compulsion is necessary
- Trust is therefore a sine qua non
- The example of the Netherlands
- Company pension funds
- Sector pension funds
- A viable option a national occupational pension
system - Escape clause for sectors and enterprises with
own system
19- Thank you for your attention!