Thailand Financial Sector Assessment Program : Funded Pension System

While Thailand’s pension system is typically described as a multipillar pension scheme, its design is highly fragmented and offers adequate coverage only to a small segment of the population, including civil servants and high-income individuals. In...

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Main Authors: World Bank, International Monetary Fund
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/858671571260308391/Thailand-Financial-Sector-Assessment-Program-Technical-Note-Funded-Pension-System
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32610
id okr-10986-32610
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-326102021-05-25T09:28:57Z Thailand Financial Sector Assessment Program : Funded Pension System World Bank International Monetary Fund PENSION SYSTEMS FIXED INCOME MARKET PENSION FUNDS PROVIDENT FUND ACCOUNTABILITY OLD AGE DEPENDENCY RATIO MUTUAL FUNDS While Thailand’s pension system is typically described as a multipillar pension scheme, its design is highly fragmented and offers adequate coverage only to a small segment of the population, including civil servants and high-income individuals. In its 2018 Article IV report, the IMF highlighted the need for a broader pension reform, including parametric changes and ender inclusivepolicies to improve female labor force participation and attenuate the impact of aging on productivity growth. While these reforms are needed, private pensions can also play a role inimproving retirement income for individuals. As agreed with the Thai authorities, this technical note provides an assessment of the private, funded components of the pension system. A key component assessed is the voluntary provident fund scheme (PVD). The PVD scheme is voluntary and operates as a tax-incentivized scheme, which allows both employers and employees to take advantage of generous tax benefits for savings for retirement. This note also addresses the challenges of the private, funded system and proposes policy recommendations for increasing coverage, improving efficiency, and delivering sustainable retirement income in the payout phase. This note is organized as follows. The next section provides a brief description of the current overall pension system, public and private; Section III provides a diagnostic of the main challenges in the private, funded system; and Section IV provides recommendations for optimizing the design of the private, funded pension system. The focus of the note is to improve the incentive structure of the private, funded pension scheme. 2019-10-23T20:06:37Z 2019-10-23T20:06:37Z 2019-06 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/858671571260308391/Thailand-Financial-Sector-Assessment-Program-Technical-Note-Funded-Pension-System http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32610 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Financial Sector Assessment Program Economic & Sector Work East Asia and Pacific Thailand
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic PENSION SYSTEMS
FIXED INCOME MARKET
PENSION FUNDS
PROVIDENT FUND
ACCOUNTABILITY
OLD AGE DEPENDENCY RATIO
MUTUAL FUNDS
spellingShingle PENSION SYSTEMS
FIXED INCOME MARKET
PENSION FUNDS
PROVIDENT FUND
ACCOUNTABILITY
OLD AGE DEPENDENCY RATIO
MUTUAL FUNDS
World Bank
International Monetary Fund
Thailand Financial Sector Assessment Program : Funded Pension System
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Thailand
description While Thailand’s pension system is typically described as a multipillar pension scheme, its design is highly fragmented and offers adequate coverage only to a small segment of the population, including civil servants and high-income individuals. In its 2018 Article IV report, the IMF highlighted the need for a broader pension reform, including parametric changes and ender inclusivepolicies to improve female labor force participation and attenuate the impact of aging on productivity growth. While these reforms are needed, private pensions can also play a role inimproving retirement income for individuals. As agreed with the Thai authorities, this technical note provides an assessment of the private, funded components of the pension system. A key component assessed is the voluntary provident fund scheme (PVD). The PVD scheme is voluntary and operates as a tax-incentivized scheme, which allows both employers and employees to take advantage of generous tax benefits for savings for retirement. This note also addresses the challenges of the private, funded system and proposes policy recommendations for increasing coverage, improving efficiency, and delivering sustainable retirement income in the payout phase. This note is organized as follows. The next section provides a brief description of the current overall pension system, public and private; Section III provides a diagnostic of the main challenges in the private, funded system; and Section IV provides recommendations for optimizing the design of the private, funded pension system. The focus of the note is to improve the incentive structure of the private, funded pension scheme.
format Report
author World Bank
International Monetary Fund
author_facet World Bank
International Monetary Fund
author_sort World Bank
title Thailand Financial Sector Assessment Program : Funded Pension System
title_short Thailand Financial Sector Assessment Program : Funded Pension System
title_full Thailand Financial Sector Assessment Program : Funded Pension System
title_fullStr Thailand Financial Sector Assessment Program : Funded Pension System
title_full_unstemmed Thailand Financial Sector Assessment Program : Funded Pension System
title_sort thailand financial sector assessment program : funded pension system
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/858671571260308391/Thailand-Financial-Sector-Assessment-Program-Technical-Note-Funded-Pension-System
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32610
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