EBF: European associations set out recommendations to ensure pension adequacy for all

01 December 2023

During the launch of European Retirement Week in Brussels, the 14 European associations presented to EU policymakers key recommendations to ensure pension adequacy for all.

The recommendations contribute to the debate on how to strengthen and ensure affordable and sustainable pension systems in the EU. As the old-age dependency ratio — the number of people aged 65 and over relative to those aged 20 to 64 — is expected to double between 2023 and 2080, there is an urgent need to address pension protection gaps and ensure pension adequacy for all.

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Pension recommendations:

European Association of Paritarian Institutions: Ensure and promote the paritarian model, which entails social protection institutions established and managed by employers and trade unions through collective agreements, as an integral part of designing and implementing occupational social protection policies. Paritarian institutions leverage collective mechanisms to enhance coverage and the attainment of pension adequacy for all.

Association for Financial Markets in Europe: Put the interests of end investors at the heart of Europe’s secondary markets by advancing the Capital Markets Union project and providing deep pools of liquidity that reduce the cost of transactions for pension fund asset managers and other investors.

AGE Platform Europe: Pensions must ensure income for a life in dignity for the entire lifespan. Statutory pensions must fairly compensate for the contributions of persons during their prime years, ensure gender equality and solidarity for life events via pension credits for childcare, informal care, unemployment, sickness, disability or other types of exclusion from the labour market. Pensions must guarantee economic security as people age through regular and automatic adaptations to the evolution of living costs and incomes.

BETTER FINANCE: In its annual report on the real return of long-term and pension-saving products, Better Finance provides evidence that many products on the market are already failing to ensure pension adequacy, placing many pension savers at risk of not meeting their individual retirement objectives. Better Finance stresses the need for access to unbiased advice, products that provide value for money, cost reduction measures across all products, standardised disclosure of information on actual costs and past performance, and the promotion of a culture of long-term financial planning.

Cross-Border Benefits Alliance-Europe: Promote funded pensions and make pay-as-you-go first-pillar pensions less burdensome and costly in terms of contributions, especially for young generations.

The European Banking Federation (EBF): Financial literacy is pivotal to ensuring the well-being of people. From a very early stage, citizens must be equipped with sound financial skills to recognise the importance of personal finance and pension planning. Financial education stands at the core of Europe’s way forward for a strong, resilient and future-proof society.

European Fund and Asset Management Association: The priority should be to encourage people to supplement their public pensions through occupational pension schemes and personal pension products, notably by developing pension-tracking systems to inform citizens about the income they can expect in retirement, offering adequate tax incentives for retirement savings, implementing auto-enrolment mechanisms and amending the pan-European personal pension product (PEPP) to address the problems posed by the fee cap and the design of the risk-mitigation techniques.

European Public Real Estate Association: Facilitate the growth of pension funds by removing administrative, fiscal and regulatory barriers to cross-border investments in the real economy. Provide retirement security to EU citizens by creating a single market for stable and highly competitive pension fund investment vehicles such as listed real estate.

EBF


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