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Mannheim Research Institute for the Economics of Aging www.mea.uni-mannheim.de Pension Reform in Germany: Introducing a multi-pillar system to cope with.

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Presentation on theme: "Mannheim Research Institute for the Economics of Aging www.mea.uni-mannheim.de Pension Reform in Germany: Introducing a multi-pillar system to cope with."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mannheim Research Institute for the Economics of Aging www.mea.uni-mannheim.de Pension Reform in Germany: Introducing a multi-pillar system to cope with demographic change Dr. Anette Reil-Held Seminar on Pension Reform Instituto de Empresa, Madrid, July 19th, 2010

2 2 The motivation for a multipillar system 195020012050 Source: 11th Population Projection by the Federal Statistical Office Problem 1: Babyboom and Babybust „Problem 2:“ Increase of life- expectancy Solution 2: Increase retirement age ManyFew Solution 1: Partial Funding

3 3 The Riester-Reform 2001: a Paradigm Shift towards a Multipillar System Three aims: 1.Sustainable contribution rates (below 20% until 2020, below 22% until 2030) 2.Secure long-term stability of pension levels: net replacement rate must stay above 67 % 3.Spread of supplementary private pension savings to compensate the lower pension level (individual and occupational pension plans) New Pension formula Retirement Saving Incentives Minimum Pension (means tested) Instruments

4 The Reform Package on the whole „Sustainability Commission“ in 2003  New set of assumptions about future demographic and economic development revealed that Riester Goals cannot be met.  Paradigm shift: think in financial possibilities.  Two main reform elements  Introduce sustainability factor in pension formula (Gross Pension Level will further decline from 48% in 2000 to 41% in 2040)  Increase retirement age from 65 to 67

5 55 The Framework of the „Riester-Pension“  Goal: Build up supplementary, voluntary, funded old-age provision assuring an overall level of provision of 70 % (like pre- reform)  Subsidies in form of flat-rate benefits and tax relief (deferred taxation principle) Subsidies  In general, everyone is eligible who is affected by the reduction in public pension benefits (employees, wage compensation beneficiaries, and also spouses)  Pension plans need to be “certified”, criteria are e.g:  Regular saving payments  Provider must guarantee a strictly positive rate of return  Pension benefits must be disbursed as certain forms of lifelong annuities  Administrative and marketing costs must be spread over initially 10, now 5 years

6 6 Saving incentives of Riester-pensions /300 Sponsoring by income and family status Gross income per year Single Married, single earner, no child Married, single earner, two children Single, one child State Spon- soring in % of savings Source: Gasche (2008)

7 Does it work? Development of Riester Pensions 1.4 13.6 5.6 10.8 Riester Pensions in Mio. Insurance plans Bank saving plans Investment fund plans Building loan contract 20011/2010

8 8  Simplification of the regulation, e.g.  Introduction of a permanent subsidy appliance procedure  30% of accumulated capital can be paid as one-off payment  Stronger sales incentives: aquisition costs have to be spread over 5 instead of 10 years  Introduction of a new tax-favoured product „Basic pension“ or „Rürup Pension“ which aims at high earners and self-employed  Tax advantage for whole life-insurance was abolished  Introduction of gender neutral tariffs for Riester Pensions „Take-off“ after Amendment (mostly the „Old-Age Retirement Income Act“ in 2005)

9 99 Does it work? Riester Pensions by number of children Source: Coppola and Reil-Held (2010) No child 1 child 2 children 3+ children

10 10 Does it work? Riester Pensions by income Source: Coppola and Reil-Held (2010) 1. Quintile 2. Quintile 3. Quintile4. Quintile5. Quintile... of the disposable household income distribution

11 Alternative Approach: Income structure of flat-rate benefits recipients Yearly Income (in Euro) Share in % (2008) Up to 10,00031,5 10,000 – 20,00020,2 20,000 – 30,00018,8 30,000 – 40,00013,8 40,000 – 50,0007,1 More than 50,0008,6 Source: Rieckhoff and Stolz (2009)

12 12 201020202030 Does it work? Will the Riester Pension close the gap? Source: Börsch-Supan and Gasche (2010) Year of entry into retirement Pension gap Riester pension % of a v g. I n c o m e

13 13 Conclusion  Riester Pensions „took off“ after the complexity of the regulation was reduced.  Nowadays about one third of all eligible persons has got a Riester Pension Plan. Good or bad? What is a realistic target?  Riester Pensions are very popular among parents.  Lower income groups are harder to reach.  4% of gross income as retirement savings are (still) just enough to compensate for the reduction in the public pension level.  The higher retirement age contributes significantly to close the gap.

14 Mannheim Research Institute for the Economics of Aging www.mea.uni-mannheim.de BACKUP

15 Promotion of occupational pensions with Riester-Reform  Right to convert part of the salary into contributions to pension plans, either  Gross pay: tax deductible and exempt from social security contributions (up to 4% of upper earnings threshold)  Net pay: Riester incentives apply  New investment vehicle: Pension funds  Succesful: coverage increases from 35 to 46% of private sector employees


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