The COVID-19 crisis has compounded the challenges facing retirement savings and old-age pension arrangements and added new ones, according to a new OECD report
The OECD Pensions Outlook 2020
says that population ageing, low growth, low returns and low interest
rates were already weighing heavily on funded and pay-as-you-go pension
plans, defined benefit and defined contribution schemes, as well as
private and public retirement provisions before the outbreak of the
pandemic. The shocks from the global health and economic crisis will
likely keep economic growth, interest rates and returns low long into
the future, putting many people at risk of not being able to save enough
for retirement.
Governments have taken a range of swift measures to improve the
sustainability and resilience of pension arrangements in response to
COVID-19. These include extending job-retention schemes and unemployment
benefits that allow workers to keep accruing retirement benefit
entitlements, or providing flexibility around pension plans.
“Countries need to strike a balance between the short-term income
support provided by measures like granting people access to their
retirement savings before they reach retirement age, and the potential
negative effect of such measures on future retirement incomes,” said
OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría. “Allowing access to retirement
savings should be a measure of last resort, and based on hardship
circumstances rather than being granted widely and unconditionally.”
“The COVID-19 crisis has also underlined the importance of having
long-term savings for emergencies,” he added. “Introducing long-term
savings arrangements that combine a savings account earmarked for
retirement and a savings account for emergencies could make retirement
savings more resilient.”
The report recommends that policy makers:
- Ensure people continue saving for retirement and avoid selling
assets and materialising losses when markets suffer sharp declines.
- Adopt a framework to assess retirement income adequacy and conduct
assessments regularly, identifying groups at risk and responding to
their specific adequacy shortfalls.
- Consider targeted measures to make sure that workers in non-standard
forms of work – part-time and temporary employees, self-employed
workers and informal workers – have the opportunity to save for
retirement.
- Address the potential negative consequences of frequent switching of
investment strategies on future retirement income and the stability of
financial markets.
- Have in place a regulatory framework that ensures that risk sharing
arrangements are sustainable and promote fairness among participants,
allowing all to enjoy the benefits of risk sharing in terms of risk
mitigation and higher expected retirement income.
Ensure communication about investment strategies, their associated
risks, rewards and costs, is consistent and standardised, adapted to the
target audience, and avoids jargon and complex metrics.
OECD
© OECD
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