The advice is an important step towards raising citizens’ awareness of their future retirement income, enhancing the monitoring of national pension systems and ultimately a way forward in closing pension gaps.
The European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA)
published today its advice to the European Commission on two pensions
tools, the pension tracking system and the pensions dashboard.
Pension Tracking System
The pension tracking system aims to help citizens to understand what
income they can expect in their retirement and raise their awareness on
whether this will be sufficient. Currently, in 20 Member States citizens
are unable to obtain an overview of their pension entitlements in an
accessible way from all possible pension sources.
With the goal to help Member States in Europe that do not have a
pension tracking system in place, EIOPA in its advice provides a set of
principles, good practices and recommendations, aiming to facilitate
citizens’ digital access to personal pension information.
Building a pension tracking system can take several years. To
facilitate this process for Member States, EIOPA has developed a visual
roadmap that contains four phases from preparation to launch, including
relevant conceptual and practical steps to consider under each phase.
In respect of product design, EIOPA recommends displaying key
information in a simple manner to make a pension tracking system
appealing and understandable for consumers.
Member States are also encouraged to connect to the European Tracking
Service to offer intra-EU mobile workers access to their pensions
entitlements accrued in the course of their career.
Pensions Dashboard
The aim of the pensions dashboard is to increase transparency on
adequacy and sustainability gaps to support policy makers at national
and EU level to make informed decisions.
EIOPA advises to develop a visual pension dashboard to strengthen the
monitoring of pension developments in the Member States by presenting a
complete set of indicators that allow for enhanced analysis and
comparison and are also easy to comprehend. In particular, EIOPA
recommends using indicators drawn from the European Commission’s
triennial Ageing, Pension Adequacy and Fiscal Sustainability reports.
These indicators need to be complemented with key information on the
contribution of privately provided occupational and personal pensions.
Furthermore, EIOPA recommends that additional pensions data are
collected from private pension providers, including non-pension fund
providers.
EIOPA identified substantial data gaps with key data only being
available for half of the supplementary pension plans and products
offered in the EU. Therefore, EIOPA believes that resolving these data
gaps is essential to enable Member States to make pensions projection
and design suitable policy responses coping with future pressure on
public finances or poverty of the senior population. A step-by-step
approach is recommended in the implementation by using currently
available pensions data and enhancing the indicators over time.
EIOPA
© EIOPA
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