Early Access to Pension Savings : International Experience and Lessons Learnt
The objectives of a well-designed pension system are poverty reduction in old age and income smoothing throughout an individuals' lifetime. Over the last thirty years, changing demographic trends have caused a shift from 'pay as you go...
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2019
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okr-10986-313562021-09-17T05:11:18Z Early Access to Pension Savings : International Experience and Lessons Learnt World Bank Group PENSIONS SAVINGS BEHAVIOR ACCESS TO FINANCE SAVINGS ACCOUNTS EARLY WITHDRAWAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT LIQUIDITY FINANCIAL EMERGENCY The objectives of a well-designed pension system are poverty reduction in old age and income smoothing throughout an individuals' lifetime. Over the last thirty years, changing demographic trends have caused a shift from 'pay as you go' and occupational defined benefit (DB) schemes - where the obligation for paying for retirement income is with the state and employers - to defined contribution (DC) schemes, where the obligation to save for retirement rests more with individuals. The transition to DC schemes did help establish a strong link between contributions during working life and benefits during retirement, for individuals. However, an increasing challenge has been balancing genuine needs for some pre-retirement liquidity, access to savings and providing adequate income post retirement for individuals. The need to get this balancing act right is being felt increasingly as coverage of national social security systems is expanded to include more of the non-salaried workforce which often has lower levels of income, more periods of unemployment and more irregular earnings. This note surveys recent literature and country experiences to understand if and how countries address the need for pre-retirement liquidity in both mandatory and voluntary DC schemes. The note also uses simple modelling to illustrate the impact of allowing access to pension savings on income adequacy after retirement. The report concludes with recommendations based on emerging best practice. 2019-03-07T18:57:58Z 2019-03-07T18:57:58Z 2019-03-01 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/757001551715193169/Early-Access-to-Pension-Savings-International-Experience-and-Lessons-Learnt http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31356 English Finance, Competitiveness and Innovation Insight; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Brief |
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World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
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World Bank |
language |
English |
topic |
PENSIONS SAVINGS BEHAVIOR ACCESS TO FINANCE SAVINGS ACCOUNTS EARLY WITHDRAWAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT LIQUIDITY FINANCIAL EMERGENCY |
spellingShingle |
PENSIONS SAVINGS BEHAVIOR ACCESS TO FINANCE SAVINGS ACCOUNTS EARLY WITHDRAWAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT LIQUIDITY FINANCIAL EMERGENCY World Bank Group Early Access to Pension Savings : International Experience and Lessons Learnt |
relation |
Finance, Competitiveness and Innovation Insight; |
description |
The objectives of a well-designed
pension system are poverty reduction in old age and income
smoothing throughout an individuals' lifetime. Over the
last thirty years, changing demographic trends have caused a
shift from 'pay as you go' and occupational
defined benefit (DB) schemes - where the obligation for
paying for retirement income is with the state and employers
- to defined contribution (DC) schemes, where the obligation
to save for retirement rests more with individuals. The
transition to DC schemes did help establish a strong link
between contributions during working life and benefits
during retirement, for individuals. However, an increasing
challenge has been balancing genuine needs for some
pre-retirement liquidity, access to savings and providing
adequate income post retirement for individuals. The need to
get this balancing act right is being felt increasingly as
coverage of national social security systems is expanded to
include more of the non-salaried workforce which often has
lower levels of income, more periods of unemployment and
more irregular earnings. This note surveys recent literature
and country experiences to understand if and how countries
address the need for pre-retirement liquidity in both
mandatory and voluntary DC schemes. The note also uses
simple modelling to illustrate the impact of allowing access
to pension savings on income adequacy after retirement. The
report concludes with recommendations based on emerging best practice. |
format |
Brief |
author |
World Bank Group |
author_facet |
World Bank Group |
author_sort |
World Bank Group |
title |
Early Access to Pension Savings : International Experience and Lessons Learnt |
title_short |
Early Access to Pension Savings : International Experience and Lessons Learnt |
title_full |
Early Access to Pension Savings : International Experience and Lessons Learnt |
title_fullStr |
Early Access to Pension Savings : International Experience and Lessons Learnt |
title_full_unstemmed |
Early Access to Pension Savings : International Experience and Lessons Learnt |
title_sort |
early access to pension savings : international experience and lessons learnt |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/757001551715193169/Early-Access-to-Pension-Savings-International-Experience-and-Lessons-Learnt http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31356 |
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1764474140343926784 |