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Matching Contributions for
Pensions
Matching Contributions for
Pensions
A REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE
Edited by
Richard Hinz, Robert Holzmann, David Tuesta, and
Noriyuki Takayama
© 2013 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank
1818 H Street NW, Washington DC 20433
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Attribution—Please cite the work as follows: Hinz, Richard, Robert Holzmann, David Tuesta, and Noriyuki Takayama,
editors. 2013. Matching Contributions for Pensions: A Review of International Experience. Washington, DC: World Bank. doi:
10.1596/978-0-8213-9492-2 License: Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 3.0
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All queries on rights and licenses should be addressed to the Office of the Publisher, The World Bank, 1818 H Street NW,
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ISBN (paper): 978-0-8213-9492-2
eISBN (electronic): 978-0-8213-9493-9
DOI: 10.1596/978-0-8213-9492-2
Cover photos: World Bank; cover design: Naylor Design
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data has been requested.
v
Contents
Foreword xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Contributors xv
Abbreviations xxi
Part I. Introduction and Conceptual Issues 1
1.
Early Lessons from Country Experience with Matching
Contribution
Schemes 3
Robert Holzmann, Richard Hinz, and David Tuesta
2. Policies to Encourage Private Pension Savings:
Evidence from OECD Countries 27
Edward Whitehouse
Part II. High-Income Country Experience 51
3. Matching Contributions in 401(k) Plans in the United States 53
Nevin Adams, Dallas Salisbury, and Jack VanDerhei
4. Riester Pensions in Germany: Design, Dynamics,
Targeting Success, and Crowding-In 81
Axel Börsch-Supan, Michela Coppola, and Anette Reil-Held
5. New Zealand’s Experience with the KiwiSaver Scheme 103
Geoff Rashbrooke
6. The Impact of Matching on Savings in the U.K. Savings
Gateway
Program 133
Will Price
7. Matching
Defi ned Contribution Pension Schemes in Japan 145
Noriyuki Takayama
8. Matching Contributions and Compliance in Korea’s
National Pension Program 161
Hyungpyo Moon
vi
CONTENTS
Part III. Middle-Income Country Experience 177
9. Complementing Chile’s Pensions with Subsidized Youth
Employment and Contributions 179
Hermann von Gersdorff and Paula Benavides
10. Matching Contributions in Colombia, Mexico, and Peru:
Experiences and Prospects 193
Luis Carranza, Ángel Melguizo, and David Tuesta
Part IV. Developing Country Experience 215
11. China’s Pension Schemes for Rural and Urban Residents 217
Mark C. Dorfman, Dewen Wang, Philip O’Keefe, and Jie Cheng
12. Learning from the Early Experience of India’s Matching
Defi ned Contribution Scheme 243
Robert Palacios and Renuka Sane
13. Using Prepaid Contributions to Cover Mobile Workers in
Cape
Verde
and
Tunisia 261
Antoine Delarue
14. Thailand’s Matching Defi ned Contribution Programs for the
Informal
Sector 275
Mitchell Wiener
Part V. Behavioral and Design Issues 287
15. Matching Contributions and Savings Outcomes:
A Behavioral Economics Perspective 289
Brigitte C. Madrian
16. Implementation Issues in Low- and Middle-Income Countries 311
Robert Palacios and Mike Orszag
Box
8.1
The National Pension Scheme in Korea 162
Figures
2.1
Expenditure on private pension benefits as percentage of total pension expenditure,
in selected OECD countries, 1990 and 2007 29
2.2
Sources of income of people over 65 in selected OECD countries, mid-2000s 29
2.3
Contribution of public and private components to simulated lifetime benefits in
21 OECD countries, 2008 31
2.4
Impact of pension reforms on lifetime retirement income benefits in selected
OECD countries 32
2.5
Private pension coverage in selected OECD countries, 2009 33
2.6
Relationship between private pension coverage and age and earnings in
selected countries 33
CONTENTS
vii
2.7
Tax treatment of investment returns, private pension contributions, and
withdrawals in selected OECD countries 36
2.8
Tax treatment of benchmark savings and private pensions in selected
OECD
countries 36
2.9
Correlation between coverage of voluntary private pensions and tax incentives for
private pensions relative to benchmark savings 37
2.10
Percentage of IRA and 401(k) saving that is new saving 38
2.11
Revenues foregone from tax incentives for private pensions in selected OECD
countries as a percentage of GDP and a percentage of public expenditure on
pensions,
2007 40
2.12
Pensioners’ incomes as a percentage of population income in selected OECD
countries,
mid-2000s 42
2.13
Coverage of voluntary private pensions compared with tax incentives for private
pensions relative to benchmark savings in selected OECD countries 44
3.1
Predicted employee contributions for selected persons and plan matching
formulas 67
4.1 Subsidy as percentage of total (own plus government matching) contribution 85
4.2
Development of Riester pensions (million contracts) 86
4.3
Coverage by private and occupational pensions, 2003–10 87
4.4
Percentage of households with private and occupational pension instruments,
2003–10 88
4.5
Fiscal costs of Riester pensions, 2003–10 88
4.6
Uptake of Riester pensions by age group 91
4.7
Uptake of Riester pensions by number of children 91
4.8
Private pension instruments by number of children in 2009 92
4.9
Private pensions by monthly household disposable income in 2009 92
4.10
Uptake of Riester pensions by quintiles of monthly household disposable
income 93
4.11
Change in total saving after enrolling in a Riester plan 95
4.12
Benefits from public and Riester pensions 97
4.13
Filling the pension gap 98
5.1
Coverage in occupational retirement schemes, 1990–2003 104
5.2
Total and monthly enrollments in KiwiSaver, 2007–11 112
5.3
Age at which member enrolled in KiwiSaver, 2007–11 113
5.4
Age distribution of KiwiSaver members and KiwiSaver eligible population,
June 30, 2011 113
5.5
Percentage of eligible population enrolled in KiwiSaver, 2008–11 114
5.6
Income distribution of KiwiSaver members and KiwiSaver eligible population,
2010 115
5.7
Annual KiwiSaver contributions by salary and wage earners, 2009/10 116
5.8
Annual KiwiSaver contribution for nonsalary and nonwage earners, 2009/10 117
5.9
Annual contribution by KiwiSavers with no income, 2009/10 117
5.10
Member tax credit granted to KiwiSavers, by age, 2011 118
5.11
Number of standard KiwiSaver scheme transfers, 2007–11 119
5.12
Managed funds assets in New Zealand, by product category, 2007–11 121
5.13
Distribution of KiwiSaver funds by asset class, 2008–12 122
5.14
Percentage of assets invested in overseas assets by KiwiSaver, other retirement funds,
and all managed funds, 2008–12 123
5.15
Duration of optional KiwiSaver contribution holidays, 2008–11 124
viii
CONTENTS
5.16
Government KiwiSaver contributions as a percentage of total funds sent to
providers, 2007–11 125
6.1
Aggregate wealth in Great Britain, by income decile and type of wealth,
2008–10 134
7.1
Retirement benefits in Japan as of March 2011 146
8.1
Coverage of Korea’s national pension system, 1988–2009 163
8.2
Payment of pension contributions by subsidy recipients and nonrecipients in Korea,
by level of income, 2007 173
9.1
Number and percentage of pensioners in Chile, by type of pension 180
9.2
Number of beneficiaries of Chile’s solidarity pension pillar, by type of benefit,
December
2011 181
9.3
Unemployment rate among people 15–24 in selected countries, 2010 182
9.4
Labor participation rate for young workers in Chile, by income decile, 2009 183
9.5
Activity of population age 18–24 in Chile, by income decile, 2009 184
9.6
Unemployment rate among people 18–24 in Chile, by income quintile, 2009 184
9.7
Number and average amount of subsidies paid in Chile under the Social Security
Subsidy for Young Workers, March 2009–December 2011 186
9.8
Monthly SEJ subsidy in Chile, by level of income 187
9.9
Number and average amount of SEJ subsidy paid in Chile 188
10.1
Pension coverage in Colombia, Mexico, and Peru 194
10.2
Pension coverage as a percentage of the labor force and GDP per capita in selected
countries, early 2000s 195
10.3
Labor informality and pension coverage in selected countries, early 2000s 196
10.4
Pension coverage in Colombia, Mexico, and Peru, by household income level 207
10.5
Nonagricultural middle-income workers in Colombia, Mexico, and Peru by
employment category 208
10.6
Pension coverage of middle-class nonagricultural workers in Colombia, Mexico, and
Peru, by type of employment 208
11.1
Rural pension participation and coverage, 1994–2010 219
11.2
Rural pension system coverage in Chengdu and Guangdong 226
12.1
Coverage of contributory pension schemes, by income level 244
12.2
Pension system coverage in India, by income level, 2010 244
12.3
Monthly enrollment in India’s New Pension Scheme, 2010–12 248
12.4
Participation in India’s New Pension Scheme, by per capita income, 2011 248
12.5
Probability of participating in India’s New Pension Scheme, by age and sex at
mean
income 252
12.6
Disaggregation of India’s workforce, 2004 253
12.7
Minimum pension contribution as share of income in India 254
13.1
Sample tripartite contribution voucher 269
15.1
Evidence on the effect of matching and saving from the H&R Block
experiment 293
15.2
Impact on Net Worth of Opening and Contributing to an Individual Development
Account
after
Three
Years 294
15.3
Distribution of contribution rates at a firm that added an employer match:
Firm
A 297
15.4
Distribution of initial contribution rates at a firm that changed its match threshold:
Firm
B 297
15.5
Evolution of contribution rates over time: Firm B 297
CONTENTS
ix
15.6
Matching contributions and savings plan participation in firms with automatic
enrollment 299
15.7
Automatic enrollment for new hires and the distribution of savings plan
contribution
rates 300
15.8
Quick Enrollment and savings plan participation: Firms C and D 303
15.9
Impact of planning aids on savings plan participation 304
16.1
Effect of subsidy on likelihood of participating in pension scheme in Peru, by
income
quintile 315
16.2
Graphical presentation of annuity choices 319
16.3
Choice between annuities 319
16.4
Replacement rates from universal flat pension for hypothetical worker by
income level 328
16.5
Role of social pension after maturation of contributory scheme 328
Tables
3.1
Percentage of active participants deferring enough salary to take full advantage of
the maximum employer match, by company size 61
3.2
Level of match offered by companies offering matching contributions, by
company
size 61
3.3
Type of employer contributions, by company size 61
3.4
Changes in employer contribution rates to 401(k) plans that adopted automatic
enrollment between 2005 and 2009, by type of modification 71
3.5
Inclusion of safe harbor plans in defined contribution plans, by company size 73
3.6
Use of automatic enrollment in defined contribution plans, by company size 73
4.1
Statutory incentives for supplementary pension provision, 2002–08 84
4.2
Direct subsidies and associated savings in Riester plans, 2005–08 89
4.3
Selected determinants of the demand for Riester and other private pension
products 96
5.1
Total cumulative enrollment in KiwiSaver, 2008–11 112
5.2
Income sources of KiwiSaver members, 2010 115
5.3
Percentage of KiwiSavers contributing at various rates, 2009–11 116
5.4
Contribution rates of KiwiSavers by member join date, as of 2011 116
5.5
KiwiSavers receiving the maximum tax credit, 2008–10 118
5.6
Method by which members entered the KiwiSavers scheme, 2008–11 119
5.7
Number and type of KiwiSaver scheme transfers, 2008–11 119
5.8
KiwiSaver scheme numbers and total assets, 2008–11 120
5.9
Allocation of KiwiSaver assets, 2011 121
5.10
KiwiSavers on contribution holiday, 2008–11 123
5.11
Cost of KiwiSaver to the government, 2008–11 126
6.1
Timeline of the Saving Gateway 135
6.2
Pilot participants’ approach to saving at beginning and end of Saving Gateway
Pilot 1 137
6.3
Mean and median saving balances in Saving Gateway Pilot 2 138
6.4
Impact of Saving Gateway pilot on saving, consumption, and net worth 140
7.1
Japanese social security at a glance 147
7.2
Japanese occupational and individual pensions at a glance 151
8.1
Number of people insured by Korea’s national pension, 2009 164
8.2
Reasons for exemption from contributing to Korea’s national pension plan,
2009 164
x
CONTENTS
8.3
Number of people covered by Korea’s national pension plan, by occupational and
participation status, 2007 165
8.4
Demographic characteristics of individually insured and noninsured people in
Korea’s national pension plan 167
8.5
Probit regression estimations of determinants of compliance with Korea’s national
pension plan among individually insured people 168
8.6
Size of matching subsidy to farmers and fishers in Korea 169
8.7
Compliance with Korea’s national pension by subsidy recipients and nonrecipients,
2007 170
8.8
Demographic characteristics of recipients and nonrecipients of subsidized
contribution to Korea’s national pension plan, 2007 171
8.9
Contribution, registration, and total effects of subsidy on pension behavior of
farmers and fishers in Korea 172
8.10
Effects of income on pension behavior of self−employed workers in Korea 174
9.1
Number and average income of contributors to Chile’s pension program,
July
2011 180
9.2
Public expenditure on Chile’s youth employment subsidies, 2008–11 186
9.3
Comparison of Chile’s youth employment subsidy programs 190
10.1
Requirements for accessing the solidarity subaccount of Colombia’s Pension
Solidarity Fund 202
10.2
Matching schemes in Mexico 203
11.1
Comparison of old and new pension schemes for rural and urban residents of
China 222
11.2
Participation rates in selected local rural and urban schemes 225
11.3
Stylized Examples of Matching Subsidy Options 228
12.1
Participation in India’s New Pension Scheme by people with and without other
financial
assets 249
12.2
Logit regressions for determinants of participation in India’s New Pension
Scheme 251
12.3
Distribution of workers in India’s unorganized sector by income decile, 2004 253
12.4
Median saving rate and life insurance coverage of workers age 20–50 in India’s
unorganized sector (middle-income deciles), 2004 254
14.1
Eligibility of formal and informal sector workers for pension programs in
Thailand 283
14.2
Features of pension programs in Thailand 283
16.1
Tabular presentation of annuity choices 319
16.2
Initial conditions affecting the design choice of a matching defined contribution
scheme
323
xi
Foreword
E
stablishing robust, equitable, and effective social protection is essential to reducing
poverty and boosting prosperity at all levels of development. The demographic transi-
tion that has already transformed most high-income societies will exert similar and grow-
ing pressures on others, reinforcing the role of pensions and savings for old age as a central
pillar of social protection systems.
Despite this increasing imperative, achieving full coverage and adequate bene-
fits within a financially sustainable pension system remains a difficult challenge for
nearly every country. Some that had previously been able to provide generous benefits
to earlier generations now face difficult reductions for future retirees and will need to
establish supplementary elements of their systems to maintain adequate income for the
elderly. Others must find ways to bring the dynamic and rapidly changing workforce
of a global competitive economy into their systems to maintain the promise of security
in old age.
After decades of reform and innovation ranging from individual mandates to cre-
ative forms of tax incentives, coverage of pension systems often remains at less than half
of the economically active population—in part because the incentives for contributing
to pension savings are often obscure or irrelevant to those who need this protection the
most: young and low-income individuals with irregular earnings and little attachment to
the formal labor force. Traditional forms of tax incentives have little relevance to those not
paying income taxes, and participation mandates are difficult to enforce in the informal
sector.
One possible solution that has emerged in recent years that offers the potential to
overcome this challenge is the provision of contribution matches to provide an immediate
and powerful incentive for participation in pension saving systems. Originating in several
high-income settings there are now a number of innovations and substantial experience in
low-income countries in using this design to stimulate coverage and savings. This experi-
ence now provides a rich opportunity for learning, not just from the longer experience of
a few high-income countries but also the more meaningful South-South learning across
developing countries.
This volume, which reviews the experience with matching pension contribu-
tions across the range of countries that have used the design, makes an initial, but
critically important investment in this learning process. The description and analysis
of this experience—which is the product of partnership and collaboration across many
public and private institutions—provide an invaluable early assessment of the design
to inform policy makers and practitioners as well as serve as a model for the kind of
xii
FOREWORD
cooperation that will be required to address this difficult challenge. At the World Bank,
we look forward to being part of this learning process of how to best provide old-age
security for all.
Arup Banerji
Director for Social Protection and Labor
The World Bank
xiii
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