Title: Gender and Pension Reform
1Gender and Pension Reformwhat policies matter
and what would we like to know?
- by
- Estelle James
- Presented at World Bank ECA Workshop, January 2008
2What is the impact of pension reform on women vs.
men?
- Recent pension reforms in LAC, ECA region and
OECD include 2 pillars - Privately managed individual accounts that link
benefits more closely to contributions - Downsized public benefit for risk diversification
and safety net - Critics argue that close B-C link hurts women
- We studied this in Latin America and found
positive impact on relative position of women. - Similar studies in ECA, Sweden have different
results. Why? What design features determine
gender impact? Do women behave differently from
men in response to new system?
3Why the gender difference in pensions? (labor
market)
- Low labor force participation rates, more
household work - Women work half as much as men, in L.Am.
- Often part-time work
- Low wages (2/3 as much as men)
- So if benefits depend on contributions and
contributions depend on wages and work, women get
low benefits - Women allowed to retire earlier than men
(60/65)-policy exacerbates low work history
4Why gender differences? (demography)
- Women live 3-5 years longer than men and are
younger than husbands, become widows - Household income may fall by 70, yet expenses
only fall by 30-35 (household economies of
scale) - Husbands often make financial decisions, dont
save and insure enough for wives, so non-pension
resources used up - Very old widows often pockets of poverty
5Our methodology
- New systems dont have retirees yet and absolute
benefits in old systems were unsustainable - We constructed synthetic work histories of
representative men and women using hh surveys - We applied rules of new and old systems to
simulate future benefits for young workers - average vs. 10 year vs. full career (FC) women
- workers in 5 different educational groups
- We compared relative (not absolute) positions of
men and women in new and old systems
6We found
- Womens monthly pension from own account is only
30-50 that of menvery unequal - But other transfers double this amount
- Public benefit adds disproportionately to low
earners (mainly women) - Joint pension raises lifetime income of married
women more than public benefit - Both set floor on income of very old women
- So average married woman gets 70-80 as much as
men over her lifetime full career married women
get more than men - Must take all parts into account policies can
accentuate or mitigate labor market differences
7Gender ratios trebles due to public benefit,
joint pension, more work
8Building blocs (1) individual accounts
- Lower wages, work, retirement age
- Workers get back their contributions interest,
no redistribution - Gender-specific mortality tables used
- Monthly annuity 30-50 that of men
- higher on lifetime basis
- Would increase by 50 if retirement age equalized
(more interest, fewer years)
92) Redistributive public benefit
- In LAC targeted to low earners (women). Raises
female/male pension ratio - Minimum pension in Chile--sets floor for
contributors - PASIS sets meant-tested floor for
non-contributors - Social quota in Mexicoflat payment per day of
work - Flat benefit in Argentina for 10 yr contributors
- Northern Europeuniversal flat or min.
pensionhigher coverage, cost - ECA (NDC, BD)--more work-related, less
redistributive to women - Key issues
- What mix of poverty avoidance, work incentives,
cost? - How to handle non-contributors, informal economy?
- Indexationto prices or wages?
10(3) Survivors benefit, joint pension
- Survivors benefits important to women because
they live longer, have lower wealth and incomes,
if husband dies hh income falls more than costs - In LAC, husbands must purchase joint pensions
- Enforces implicit family contract re hh division
of labor after husbands death (family
co-insurance) - Big income to widows, no cost to public treasury
- Adds 50-80 to lifetime own-pension
- Keep ownjoint pension (no work disincentive)
- Avoids controversial unisex issue, subsidy to
middle class married women - Survivors benefit downsized but joint pension not
required in ECA, Swedenlooming problem
11Own annuity lt50 total lifetime pension for
women joint annuitygtpublic benefit
12Womens position improved in new system. Which
women?
- Women gained relative to men, especially
- Low earners due to public benefit
- Married women, especially those who work--keep
joint annuity own pension - Full career women (flat age-earnings profiles)
- Mixed results for
- Women who worked 10 years or less--low own
pension, sometimes not eligible for public
benefit - Single and divorced womenno joint pension
- Single men also gained because they dont have to
pay tax to finance widows benefit
13Different impact in transition economies (East
C. Europe)
- Wage inequality is growing, so accounts unequal
- Public benefits less targeted toward low earners
- Survivors benefit reduced to save money
- Policies re joint annuities not yet clear
- Many single and divorced women
- Earlier allowable retirement age hurts women more
in new systems - Therefore new systems appear to increase gender
inequality in pensions in transition economies - Detailed design features matter a lot
14How to increase and share growth dividend
among women
- Equalize retirement ages and get rid of other
policies that discourage womens work - increases GDP, raises womens pensions
- earlier retirement is example of myopia that
mandatory system are supposed to counteract - Consider more redistributive public benefit
- to help women, low earners, informal sector
- partial wage indexation once costs are under
control - Require joint pensions
- In Europe survivors benefits downsized to save
money, but this inevitably hurts older women
(poverty is high) - Joint pension protects widows, no cost to public
treasury - women keep own joint pension (no work
disincentive) - Share assets in case of divorce
15Research on how pension reform changes behavior
of M and W
- In Chile old and new systems co-exist and
retrospective data set built so we study impact
of new system on behavior, which affects
outcomes - Does new system postpone pension age for MW?
- Does it postpone withdrawal from labor market
because work restrictions removed, exemption from
payroll tax? - Which retirees choose annuitization?
- Do M and W make different risk-return
investments? - How well informed are M and W about new system?
- We found Women less likely to annuitize, have
smaller LS impact. M and W have very limited
information. - Can comparable studies be done for ECA?