Pension Pillar

  

A “pension pillar” is an element of the pension framework described by the World Bank and adopted by many countries, mostly in Europe. There are actually five pension pillars, and each pillar represents a different type of pension format. According to the World Bank, the point of this pension pillar framework is to help policymakers and financial institutions make sure they’re addressing issues related to retirement, poverty, and old age in their societies.

So what are these pillars and what do they mean? Here’s a quick and dirty breakdown:

Zero pillar—This pillar requires no pay-in and provides pensioners with the minimum level of financial and social service support to keep them alive.

First pillar—People contribute, and then, when they retire, they receive a pension that is equal to part of their prior working income (there are some who say first-pillar pension plans should be mandatory for all working people).

Second pillar—Individual savings accounts that exist to help with retirement expenses.

Third pillar—Voluntary pay-in pension plans that will provide more financial stability in our golden years than first-pillar plans.

Fourth pillar—Relying on our network of friends and loved ones to carry the costs of whatever we need, but can’t afford in our old age.

The five-pillar framework isn’t a recipe. Countries don’t receive exact instructions on how to create their own successful national retirement plan soufflé. But what it does do (at least, the World Bank is hoping this is what it does) is gently nudge the folks in power toward thinking more about the long-term needs of a society that is living longer and longer. If we as lawmakers and retirement planners take a more holistic view of what our country offers for retirees—in other words, if we evaluate our nation’s retirement resources in terms of each of the five pillars—then it might help us come up with better and more useful options and plans for our own citizens.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What are Pension Liabilities?23 Views

00:00

finance a la shmoop. what are pension liabilities? okay so if you haven't seen

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our James Cameron directed and shmoop academy award-winning video called

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what is a pension, we'll watch that first. before you continue. okay hi welcome back. [link to pension video]

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a pension liability is not that different from a liability owed by any

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corporation or even an individual. the corporations and governments both

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provide pensions for their employees. very roughly an employee making say 75

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grand a year might get 10% of a salary a year in pension contributions from the

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employer. while pensions are divided into two

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flavors. there are defined contribution pensions - one flavor of a 401k plan. in a

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defined contribution plan the employee contributes say 10% of their salary and [defined contribution pension defined]

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in this case that would be 7,500 bucks. and the employer might match it. that is

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the employer takes 7,500 bucks off of their total salary that is calculated

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for taxes so the employee instead of being taxed on 75 grand a year gets

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taxed on sixty seven thousand five hundred they then defer the 7,500 bucks

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they put into their 401k plan and well they'll still pay taxes on it eventually [equations on screen]

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when they take it out but presumably when they're old and retired and poor

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and thus likely to pay lower tax rates than they would in their heavy working

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high tax hike tax rate era at the peak of their careers. so the employee saves

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seventy five hundred bucks there or at least puts it away, and the employer

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matches that 75 with seventy five hundred of its own. so from the employers

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perspective that employee does not just get a seventy-five thousand dollar [equations on screen]

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salary they cost the employer 75 grand plus another seventy five hundred bucks

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of 401k pension matching expenses or eighty two thousand five hundred dollars.

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and the employer pays it grumbling and wondering when the next version of robot

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comes out so they can replace this worker ,well what happens to those

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savings. well, employers usually provide employees with a menu of investment

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choices they can hold all cash, they can invest in high-growth relatively risky [list of investment options shown]

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funds, they can invest in balanced growth and income funds and so on and so on.

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well the employee gets to choose from a supermarket of investment fund choices

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or even buy individual stocks in their pension. the key takeaway at the

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end of however many years or decades of working the employee is able to take out

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from their pension whatever value that pension has accrued to be worth over

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that time period. easy. in a defined contribution fund there is essentially [flow chart]

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no pension liability. no pension liability to the corporation other than

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each year doing the matching thing on that salary. okay?

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the employee bears the stock market risk just like everyone else. the big

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controversies you read about in the press revolve around the benefit flavor

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of a pension, 2nd flavor here, called a defined benefit plan. in a defined

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benefit situation a number of irresponsible financial dealings take [types of pensions listed]

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place where taxpayer money is often just given away with no thought of fiduciary

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duty or obligation to ,you know being respectful of the taxpayers hard-earned

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money. a given government worker works for the state for 30 years eventually

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making a hundred grand a year at the end having received pension contributions

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all along the way just as in the defined contribution system that corporations [equation on screen]

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use as outlined above .only in a government defined benefit program the

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employee is guaranteed a minimum rate of return in many situations. that is the

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employee is guaranteed say 10% a year in investment returns even if the stock

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market is flat or down or bad for 7 ,10 15 ,years whatever. that happens all the

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time, yet the taxpayers on the hook to give

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them that guaranteed 10 percent a year compound rate. well at a 10 percent of [flow chart]

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your compound rate after seven years well let's say the actual stock market

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return was only 7 percent and the employee lagged 3 percent a year each

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year compounded well that would be a lot that the state would then owe them so

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that's one flavor of pension liability that could likely bankrupt California

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and Illinois at some point not too far away because the pension liabilities [California and Illinois pictured.]

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there are enormous. and it gets worse there are other irresponsible things the

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states have done like guarantee retirement return minimums or investing

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pension money in dead stock beanie babies. it was a really bad investment by

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CalPERS there huh. so yeah pension liabilities are a

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totally simple easy to understand uncontroversial thing and while they

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can't possibly have an adverse effect on the world around us right? sorry hard to

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keep a straight face there. [man talks out the side of his mouth]

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