Title: Paying for pensions
1Paying for pensions
- Administrative charges, individual choices and
institutional structures - Edward Whitehouse Oaxaca, Mexico, May 2006
2Agenda
- Measuring charges for private pensions what have
trends in charges been? - Policies on charges how to keep them low
- How institutional structures and the degree of
individual choice affect charges - Evidence from OECD countries, Latin America and
Eastern Europe
3Measuring charges
- Complex charge structures
- comparisons are difficult both between countries
and between providers - A single measure of charges
- charge ratio proportion of accumulated balance
- reduction in yield proportion of assets in fund
at any one time - Illustration assume 3.5 real return, 2 wage
growth and 40 year term
50
Charge, of accumulation
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
Charge, of assets
4Charge ratios
Australia (retail)
Mexico
UK (personal)
Bulgaria
Peru
Argentina
UK (stakeholder)
Poland
Uruguay
El Salvador
Sweden
Colombia
Chile
Australia (industry)
Bolivia
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
5Trends in charges Chile
30
Charge ratio,
25
20
15
10
5
0
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
6Trends in charges
45
40
Argentina
35
Mexico
30
Bulgaria
Peru
25
20
El Salvador
Poland
15
Uruguay
Chile, Colombia
10
5
0
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
Source FIAP, OECD
7Policies on charges indirect measures
- Disclosure
- standard format
- league tables
- public information
- Incentives
- person who bears the charge should choose the
provider - levy charges on top of contributions
- Transparency
- a single price for pensions
- Restrict switching providers
- might reduce marketing costs
8Policies on charges direct measures
- Ceilings on charges
- El Salvador, Kazakhstan, Poland, Sweden, UK
(stakeholder) - Subsidies to low-income workers
- Mexico
- Force switchers to choose lower cost funds
- Mexico
- Subsidise charges
- New Zealand (KiwiSaver)
- Cross-subsidise charges
- Sweden
- Different institutional and structural approaches
9Individual choices
Portfolio no Portfolio limited Portfolio yes
Provider no Denmark Hong Kong Ireland (OP) Switzerland Australia (members of corporate, industry, public-sector funds until 2005) United States (TIAA/CREF, TSP) Singapore United States (401k)
Provider limited Hungary Chile Estonia Peru Slovak Republic
Provider yes Argentina Mexico Poland Australia (2005 on until 2005 for retail funds) Sweden United Kingdom (personal, stakeholder) United States (IRA, Keogh)
10Investment choice 401k plans
of members 1978 1994
Investment choice
Employee contributions 16 94
Employer contributions 10 74
Number of investment choices
1 51 12
2 28 7
3 13 9
4 4 15
5 4 58
Source Schieber, Dunn and Wray (1998)
11Investment choice Australia
- of assets average with choice
choices - Corporate 73.9 4
- Industry 98.0 7
- Public sector 56.5 6
- Retail 88.1 59
- Total 85.3 23
Source Australian Prudential Regulatory
Authority
12Consolidation
30
Number of providers
Bulgaria 8 Estonia 6 Hungary 6
Kazakhstan 14 Slovak Republic 8
25
Argentina
Poland
20
Chile
Mexico
15
Dominican R
Colombia
10
Costa Rica
Uruguay
Peru
5
El Salvador
Bolivia
0
1995
2000
2005
13Portfolio choices
- Mexico 2
- Slovak Republic 2-3
- Estonia 3
- Peru 3
- Chile 5
14How many investment choices?
- Choice increases welfare
- Choice increases participation
- 50 of people eligible participate in 401ks
without choice, 87 with choice - controlling for individual and employer
characteristics, introduction of choice increases
average contribution by 43, from 5.1 to 7
Source Papke (2004) 1 870 individuals HRS data
15How many investment choices?
- Demotivation and choice overload consumer
studies show more choice - more interest
- fewer purchases
- more uncertainty over choices
- Distribution of choice in 401ks 2-59 funds,
median 13, 90 between 6 and 22. Effect of
adding 10 funds to the menu - participation -2
- portfolio share of safe investments 5.4ge
pts - portfolio share of equities -8ge pts
Source Iyengar and Jiang (2003) 800 000
individuals in 650 401k plans managed by Vanguard
16Conclusions
- Emphasis in Latin America and Eastern Europe was
on choice of provider - Only recently has there been a move towards
choice of investment portfolio - Consolidation has reduced range of provider
choice - OECD countries are actively considering different
structural solutions to reduce costs - centralised collection of contributions
- centralised recordkeeping
- outsourced fund management
- limited choice of investments
17Contact details
- Edward Whitehouse
- ELS/SPDOECD2 rue Andre Pascal75775 Paris Cedex
16France - 33 (1) 45 24 80 79
- edward.whitehouse_at_oecd.org
- www.oecd.org/els/social
18Further reading
- Administrative charges for funded pensions
measurement concepts, international comparison
and assessmentJournal of Applied Social Science
Studies, 2000 - Paying for pensionsOccasional Paper no. 13,
Financial Services Authority, 2000 (free
download www.fsa.gov.uk) - Administrative charges for funded pensions
comparison and assessment of 13 countriesin
Private Pension Systems Administrative Costs and
Reforms, OECD, 2001 - Costs and charges for administering individual
pension accounts in India national and
international evidencein Rethinking Pension
Provision for India, Tata McGraw-Hill, New Delhi,
2003 - Administrative charges for funded pensions an
international comparison and assessmentSocial
Protection Discussion Paper no. 0016, World Bank,
2000 (free download www.worldbank.org/pensions)