Remodelling Pillars and Tiers:

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DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL POLICY AND INTERVENTION Bernhard Ebbinghaus Professor of Social Policy, Department of Social Policy & Intervention Senior Research Fellow, Green Templeton College, University of Oxford Remodelling Pillars and Tiers: The Social Consequences for Coverage and Adequacy of Pensions in Europe Pensions Authority Conference, Dublin, 2 March 2017

Challenges to retirement income policies in Europe (well-known) economic challenges: Demographic ageing Globalization: economic competition Financial limits: public debt, Maastricht criteria Public/ private pillars Goal: financial sustainability reforming the pillars of pension systems Reforms: shift toward marketization & privatization of pensions (additional) social challenges (old or new social risks?): Income Flexibilization: atypical, precarious careers (coverage?) tiers Reconciling work and family (child credits?) Plural family/household forms (individualised benefits?) Goal: social sustainability readjusting the tiers of pension systems Reducing poverty & social inequality today and in future

Pillars before and after the 2008-crash Global paradigm shift since 1990s: Reforming pensions is one of the biggest challenges of the 21st century! (OECD) I: Public (pay-as-you-go) pensions II: Occupational pensions (largely funded) (by employer or collective negotiations): defined benefit (DB) or defined contribution (DC) III: Personal pensions (funded, DC) But: post-crash financial crisis (2007/08-) I: Sovereign debt crisis: more pressures on PAYG II: DB pensions: underfunded firm-sponsored funds II/III: DC pensions: low returns later retirement? Individualized risks: increase in poverty & inequality? Puzzle: How to square financial & social goals?

Multipillar / multitier pension architecture Privatization Pillar: responsibility & governance I. Pillar (public) II. Pillar (private) III. Pillar (private) Tier: income function Public Occupational Personal 3rd Tier (topping up) 2nd Tier (contributory/ earnings-related) mandatory PP (DC) Social insurance Private OP (DB / DC) Savings Private PP (DC) Income maintenance: inequality? 1st Tier (minimum) Basic (all), targeted (means-test) Minimum income: poverty? Ebbinghaus, B. (ed.) (2011), The Varieties of Pension Governance: Pension Privatization in Europe, Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Pillars & tiers: poverty / inequality in old age Bismarckian Beveridgean Pension benefit % past earnings social insurance basic pension Private OP/PP Past earnings during working life Poverty: Bismarckian: Minimum (social pension) / targeted social assistance Beveridgean: Basic pension for all residents; flat-rate benefit enough? Inequality: Reproduction of market inequality through contributory pensions (DB, DC) Labour force participation & job tenure important (SI, OP/PP) coverage? Financial market risks of funded pensions (e.g. 2008 crash)

First pillar & tier: basic safety net & minimum pensions 100 80 60 40 20 00 00 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Safety-net Minimum contributory Access: Recipients % all pensioners Netherlands Iceland United Kingdom Denmark Greece Portugal Czech Republic Finland Sweden France Italy Spain Luxembourg Norway Slovenia Ireland Belgium Poland Switzerland Austria Estonia Slovak Rep. Germany Hungary Safetynet Minimum Generosity: Gross benefit level % average earnings OECD (2013), Pensions at a Glance 2013; own calculations

Poverty risk: working vs. elderly population (EU-SILC) a) Poverty (60% level) 2005: Working vs. elderly population b) Poverty (60% level) 2014: Working vs. elderly population Poverty rate higher among elderly except CEE, NL, LU Poverty gap shifts toward working population due to crisis

Inequality: private pension recipients & benefits, mid-2000s Recipient Rate by Income Group in % Recipient's Private Pension Share by Income Group in % Higher income groups more likely to be covered by private pensions Middle (& lower) income groups covered when (quasi)mandatory pensions Large income share (50%) particularly for higher income groups Private funded pensions important in UK, CH, NL and Nordic countries Source: B. Ebbinghaus & J. Neugschwender, Ch. 14, The Varieties of Pension Governance, OUP 2011

First & second tier pensions & poverty First & second tier pensions: income replacement (EU-SILC) The higher the pension income replacement, the lower the rate of elderly poverty At risk of poverty (60%) 65+: Bismarckian social insurance: - Social pensions (F, Lux): low; (South, CEE): medium/low - Social assistance (means-tested, DE): medium Beveridgean basic/multi-pillars: Generous basic pension (DK, NL): low 60%-poverty Low BP & targeted benefits (UK, Irland): medium Low BP only (EE, CH): high Encompassing (SE, FI) with targeted minimum: medium

Access: Occupational pension coverage, Ireland 2005-15 % employed (aged 20-69) 2005 2015 2005-15 Total 55.9 46.7-16.5% Male 59.5 47.2-20.7% Female 51.0 46.2-9.4% Age group 20-24 27.8 14.1-49.3% 25-34 53.5 36.1-32.5% 35-44 66.3 55.3-16.6% 45-54 64.8 54.4-16.0% 55-69 54.4 49.3-9.4% Nationality Irish nationals 58.0 49.4-14.8% Non-Irish nationals 32.1 29.2-9.0% ILO Employment Status Self-employed & relatives 48.4 29.9-38.2% Employee 57.4 50.2-12.5% Hours of work Full-time 61.2 55.0-10.1% Part-time 29.9 22.3-25.4% NACE Economic Sector 2005 20152005-15 A Agriculture, forestry and fishing 35.7 28.5-20.2% B-E Industry 66.0 52.1-21.1% F Construction 46.1 34.1-26.0% G Wholesale & retail trade; repair 39.3 26.5-32.6% H Transportation & storage 60.6 42.6-29.7% I Accommodation & food service 23.7 13.1-44.7% J Information & communication 67.3 58.9-12.5% K-L Financial, insurance & real estate 78.2 75.2-3.8% M Professional, scientific & technical 59.5 49.5-16.8% N Administrative & support service 37.2 24.9-33.1% O Public administration 93.4 89.1-4.6% P Education 72.2 72.6 0.6% Q Human health & social work 63.0 58.5-7.1% R-U Other NACE activities 34.2 23.3-31.9% Source: QNHS Pension Provision, CSO, Dublin 30/5/2016

Coverage of private pensions across OECD - Automatic enrolment in UK: - Since 2012 phasing-in by 2020, stepwise by size of employer - Individuals (aged 22-SPAge), earning more than 10000 p.a. - Public sector already high - Private sector, depending on size of employer and time lag (Source: DWP 2015) - Mandatory schemes: Switzerland, some CEE countries (100%) - Collective schemes: NL, DK negotiated schemes (nearly 90%) - Automatic enrolment: NZ - Voluntary schemes with tax incentives (Germany) (Source: OECD 2012)

Trend towards individualized risks in Ireland & UK: from defined benefit (DB) to defined contribution (DC) Defined benefit (DB): Pooling of risks possible Employer responsibility (liability) But underfunding problems in crisis Defined contribution (DC): Individualized risks, but portable Lower returns in crisis, will have immediate effect => Secular decline in DB, shift to DC schemes for new staff Source: OECD Pensions Outlook 2016: figure 1.3 (assets: millions national currency, members: in thousands)

Policy outlook: the future of old age inequality Future potential causes of poverty & inequality: First tier crucial for anti-poverty policy: access and generosity Coverage: low educated, nonstandard work, small firms Women with longer interruptions without child-care credits Survivors, particularly widows, with insufficient contribution records Private pension provide no social redistribution Market risks of funded (DC) schemes during crises All pillars and tiers matter! Department of Social Policy and Intervention Bernhard Ebbinghaus, Professor of Social Policy & Fellow Green Templeton College 2 March 2017

Literature Monographs: Ebbinghaus, B. (ed.) (2011), The Varieties of Pension Governance. Pension Privatization in Europe. Oxford: OUP 2011, (incl. chapters on pension reforms, on governance, and on inequality) Journal publications: Ebbinghaus, B. (2015), The Privatization and Marketization of Pensions in Europe: A Double Transformation Facing the Crisis, European Policy Analysis 1(1): 56-73. Ebbinghaus, B. (2015), Demografische Alterung und Reformen der Alterssicherung in Europa Probleme der ökonomischen, sozialen und politischen Nachhaltigkeit", Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie (KZfSS), 67(S1): 325-348. Ebbinghaus, B. & D. Hofäcker (2013), Reversing Early Retirement in Advanced Welfare Economies: A Paradigm Shift to Overcome Push and Pull Factors, Comparative Population Studies (CPoS), 38(4): 807-840. Ebbinghaus, B. & T. Wiß (2011), Taming Pension Fund Capitalism in Europe: Collective and State Regulation in Times of Crisis, Transfer 17(1): 15-28. Ebbinghaus, B. & N. Whiteside (2012), Shifting responsibilities in Western European pension systems, Global Social Policy 12(3): 266 282.