With
the global village finding its inhabitants aging and with record numbers of
people over the age of 65, a recent
study by Natixis Global Asset
Management that examines the level of retirement security in 43 nations is
particularly pertinent. The study looks at 18 performance indicators that
are key to the older demographic component of society and covers four thematic
indices and their component subindices that are important for a quality life in
one's sunset years:
1.)
Material Wellbeing - the material means to live comfortably in retirement -
includes income equality, income per capita and unemployment subindices.
2.)
Finances in Retirement - access to quality financial services to help preserve
savings value and maximize income - includes old-age dependency, bank
non-performing loans, inflation and interest rates subindices.
3.)
Health - access to quality health services - includes life expectancy, health
expenditure per capita and non-insured health expenditures indices
4.)
Quality of Life - a clean and safe environment - includes happiness, air
quality, water and sanitation, biodiversity and habitat and environmental
factors subindices.
With
this data, Natixis calculates a Global Retirement Index or GRI which allows for
a consistent comparison tool for measuring retirement security between
jurisdictions. With that background, let's look at the ratings for 2017.
Regionally,
of the top ten performers, eight are located in Western Europe and the
remaining two are located in the Asia Pacific Region. The bottom ranking
nations are the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China); that said,
Russia and Brazil perform better than Greece and China ranks ahead of both
Turkey and Greece. Here are the top ten performers with their GRI score
for 2017 and a comparison to the 2016 score in brackets:
1.)
Norway - 86 percent (86 percent)
2.)
Switzerland - 84 percent (84 percent)
3.)
Iceland - 82 percent (80 percent)
4.)
Sweden - 80 percent (79 percent)
5.)
New Zealand - 80 percent (80 percent)
6.)
Australia - 78 percent (78 percent)
7.)
Germany - 77 percent (78 percent)
8.)
Denmark - 77 percent (77 percent)
9.)
Netherlands - 77 percent (78 percent)
10.)
Luxembourg - 76 percent (76 percent)
While
most of the top ten nations have strong scores across subindices, even the
strongest nations have issues with the Finances in Retirement index, largely
because of high tax burdens and a high public debt-to-GDP ratio. Germany,
Sweden and Denmark all face problems with a shrinking base of younger workers
which will ultimately prove to be problematic as fewer and fewer workers
support an aging population (growing old-age dependency ratio). As you can
see on this graphic from the World Bank, the growth in the
old-age dependency ratio is a global issue:
For
instance, here are some examples of the growing old-age dependency ratio
problems among the world's developed economies, comparing the ratio in 1960 to
the ratio in 2016:
Australia
- 14 and 23
Austria
- 18 and 28
Belgium
- 19 and 29
Canada
- 13 and 25
Denmark
- 17 and 30
France
- 19 and 31
Germany
- 17 and 33
Greece
- 12 and 34
Japan
- 9 and 45
Netherlands
- 15 and 29
Norway
- 18 and 25
Spain
- 13 and 29
Sweden
- 18 and 32
United
Kingdom - 18 and 28
United
States - 15 and 23
Here
is a table showing the breakdown in the Global Retirement Index scores for the
top 25 nations in the study:
As
you can see, the United States is a rather poor finisher, coming in 17th place,
a drop from 14th place in 2016, dragged down by its very low score on the
material wellbeing index. Canada comes in at 11th place, down one spot
from its 10th place finish in 2016. Let's look at a bit more detail for
both nations since these are the two nations that most of my readers come from.
United
States - saw declines in two of the four indices; quality of life and material
well-being. The United States highest ranking sub-index is Health which
sits in 7th place overall with the only indicator to fall being life
expectancy. Despite the United States high per capita income (5th
overall), its worst performing sub-index is the Material Wellbeing subindex
which sits at 28th place overall, largely because of America's issue with high
levels of income inequality.
Canada
- saw declines in two of the four indices; quality of life and material
well-being coming in at 15th and 20th place overall compared to 8th place for
Finances and 9th place for Health. Canada's highest ranking subindex is
Health which sits in 10th place overall with its life expectancy indicator
rising on a year-over-year basis. While Canada's income inequality is not
particularly high (21st place overall compared to 28th place for the United
States), it has fallen on a year-over-year basis. As well, there have
been declines in the employment and per capita income indicators.
With
the global population aging, particularly in the world's developed economies,
security in retirement will become an increasingly important aspect of life.
With many of the world's most advanced nations suffering from a rising
old-age dependency ratio at the same time as low interest rates have lulled
them into taking on what can only be described as dangerous levels of sovereign
debt, retirees over the next 20 years may find that their retirement is not as
secure as that of their parents, particularly given the growing strain on the
health care system and dropping returns on investments thanks to a decade of
ultra-low interest rates.
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