A
recent publication, "We'll
Live to 100 - How Can We Afford It" by the World Economic Forum takes
a sobering look at the financial repercussions of living to the century mark, a
greater likelihood than it has ever been. As many current studies have
shown, while we may be living longer, we are most likely to live longer and
live poorer with a very significant portion of the world in both developed and
undeveloped nations simply not saving enough to fund their elder years.
Since
the 1950s, life expectancy has been increasing at an average rate of one
additional year of life for every five years that passed. Here is a
graphic showing how longevity has been increasing over the past 7 decades:
Of
course, these are merely projections based on "past performance"; any
number of factors could reduce longevity. While this all seems wonderful,
there is a significant downside; the global dependency ratio (the ratio of
those who are in the workforce to those who are in retirement) will drop
significantly from 8:1 today to 4:1 by 2050. This likely means that
retirement age will have to rise since there is no way that the current
pension/retirement system can be sustained. As well, the population over
the age of 65 will increase from 600 million today to 2.1 billion in 2050.
The rise in longevity and the drop in the dependency ratio will combine
to form the "perfect retirement storm" meaning that governments
around the world will have to take significant actions to prevent hundreds of
millions of their citizens from retiring to a cat food future (if they are that
lucky).
Here
is a summary of the challenges facing the current retirement system:
1.)
Lack of easy access to pension plans - this is particularly problematic in the
growing self-employed/informal job sector.
2.)
Long-term, low-growth investment environment - the past is the past when it
comes to returns on investments. Baring any sudden changes, equities are
projected to perform about 5 percentage point below historic averages and bond
returns are projected to perform about 3 percentage points below historic
averages. As well, low returns on long bonds have created a growing
underfunding crisis in the pension world where high interest rates are needed
to assure long-term viability.
3.)
Low levels of financial literacy combined with a high degree of individual
responsibility to manage pension funds - this is particularly problematic in
our new defined contribution pension plan world where individual investors are
expected to make investment decisions on their own. As it stands now,
over 50 percent of global retirement assets are held in defined contribution
plans, far different from the 20th century where most pension plans were
defined benefit plans that were professionally managed with an assured payout
upon retirement.
4.)
Inadequate savings rates - to support retirement, 10 to 15 percent of one's
annual salary needs to be saved. Savings rates in most nations are far
lower meaning that retirement incomes will be significantly below what is
needed to retire with financial security.
With
this background information, let's look at the size of the shortfall in pension
saving for eight of the world's largest economies with the following
assumptions:
1.)
governments provide the first pillar pension
2.)
employers (public or private) provide the second pension
3.)
Individual savings make up the balance needed to retire
Here
is a graphic showing the size of the retirement savings gap (in trillions of
dollars) assuming that retirees will require income totalling 70 percent of
their pre-retirement income to adequately support their needs:
For these eight nations, the individual retirement savings gap (in
2015) is estimated to be about $66.9 trillion with the largest shortfall being
in the United States, currently at $28 trillion and growing to $137 trillion in
2050. The $70 trillion gap is roughly 1.5 times the annual GDP of these
eight nations and is expected to grow by an average of 5 percent annually, reaching
$427.8 trillion by 2050 or a daily growth rate of $28 billion.
Now
let's look at what the pension system funding situation looks like when we
add in the shortfalls in corporate pension plans, government public
pensions and public employee pension plans and the individual retirement
savings gap:
While
we in the developed world regularly here about the funding shortfall in the
corporate pension system, as you can see here, the corporate pension funding
gap is quite small when compared to the unfunded government public pension
system and public employee plans and the individual retirement savings
shortfall. Here is a table showing the shortfall for all three aspects of
retirement funding for all eight nations in the study:
Let's
focus on the individual retirement savings gap in the United States. Here
is a graphic showing the individual retirement savings gap for Americans and
how the lower returns on investments have had an impact on the personal
retirement savings underfunding:
While
some of the shortfall can be blamed on the low investment returns, as you can
see, the low returns have increased the $4.1 trillion shortfall by 35
percent to $5.55 trillion, a rather significant increase thanks to central bankers and their low interest rate experimentation.
Given
that this is what has happened over the past three to the percentage of people
in the United Kingdom over the age of 65 that are still working:
...and this is what has happened to the U.S.
labour force participation rate for Americans over the age of 65 since 2008:
...it
looks like individuals have figured out that the old standard of retiring at
age 65 no longer applies for financial (and other) reasons, suggesting that the
WEF analysis is not far from wrong.
This
analysis by the World Economic Forum is sobering. Given that hundreds of
millions of workers will be retiring over the next two decades, there is an
urgent need for changes to the system and and an equally urgent need for people to realize that funding
their sunset years is key to a happy retirement. While the prospect of living to be 100 years old is appealing, the prospect of being forced to eat cat food to get there is most definitely not!
Over the years society has become more tolerant, sadly ideas like euthanasia and even discrete breastfeeding in public still drive many Americans crazy. In the United States, with its culture of optimism and its religiosity, many people want to postpone dying at any cost often including that of pain.
ReplyDeleteWith people living longer and technologies ability to extend a person's life well beyond where they feel it has any "real quality" the issue of euthanasia will not go away. The article below makes the case that confronting our own mortality sooner rather than later is conducive to living a better and more balanced life, mortality influences our values and feelings about everyday life.
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2017/04/euthanasia-opens-path-to-dignified-death.html