What Will
Happen To Pensions
If We Fail To Say No To Europe & The Euro
http://www.no-euro.com/factsfigures/briefs/pensions.asp
Britain is better off, both because our demographic position
is much stronger, and because our pension savings are
more than the savings of Germany, France, Italy and Spain
put together.
Pensions
Key points
- The Eurozone countries face a crisis
because they have rapidly ageing populations and unfunded
public pension liabilities. Britain is better off, both
because our demographic position is much stronger, and
because our pension savings are more than the savings
of Germany, France, Italy and Spain put together.
- If under the Maastricht criteria
borrowing is restricted, then Eurozone governments will
have to choose between massive cuts in spending or large
tax rises. For example Italy could either cut government
purchases by half, or increase income tax by about 28
per cent.
- If we were locked into an economic
union we might be forced to pay for their bankrupt pension
systems.
- The Eurozone countries have made
few genuine moves towards pension reform.
- “Pensions payments could easily
turn into a vicious circle. If pension spending were
not reformed, but led to higher deficits, some countries
would not respect their obligations under the growth
and stability pact; which in turn could lead to inflationary
pressures; which in turn would result in the ECB having
to set higher interest rates with negative impact not
only on investment, but also on growth and employment,
which are the basis of sustainable pension systems…Clearly
the reply to these questions - pay more, work longer,
get less, is not an easy message to sell” (Internal
Market Commissioner Frits Bolkestein, speech on “defusing
Europe’s pensions timebomb” 6 February 2001).
1.
Demographic change - Ratio of people over 64 to people
of working age
|
Country
|
2000
|
2010
|
2020
|
2030
|
2040
|
2050
|
|
France
|
27
|
28
|
36
|
44
|
50
|
51
|
|
Germany
|
26
|
33
|
36
|
47
|
55
|
53
|
|
Italy
|
29
|
34
|
40
|
49
|
64
|
67
|
|
Spain
|
27
|
29
|
33
|
42
|
56
|
66
|
|
UK
|
26
|
27
|
32
|
40
|
|
46
|
|
EU-15
|
27
|
30
|
35
|
44
|
52
|
53
|
Source: European Commission Progress
Report on the Impact of Ageing Populations
2. Total
Pension Assets
|
Country
|
$ billion
|
% GDP
|
|
France
|
64.1
|
4
|
|
Germany
|
294
|
13
|
|
Italy
|
250
|
20
|
|
Spain
|
29.1
|
5
|
|
UK
|
1444.5
|
101
|
Source: William Mercer European Pension
Fund Managers Guide 2000
3. The extent
of the effect on debt
The UKs current national debt
is equivalent to about £5,000 per person. If one
added to that the per capita burden of our unfunded pension
liabilities, the total debt burden in the UK would be
some £9,000 per person. But if we took on also our
share of the total unfunded pension liabilities of the
EU, that figure would increase to some £30,000 of
debt for every man, woman and child in this country. The
adoption of a single currency would entail the adoption
of a single balance sheet, but the extent
of unfunded pension liabilities in certain of our European
partner countries casts serious doubt upon the long term
sustainability of their finances (House of Commons
Social Security Committee, Unfunded pension liabilities
in the European Union 1996).
4.
The adjustment needed
Based on predictions of changing dependency
ratios Ferguson and Kotlikoff have calculated the total
adjustment needed in Government tax and spending needed
to create generational balance. The table shows the change
that would be needed if all the adjustment was by that
particular method.
Total change needed if one of
these types of change were used exclusively
|
Country
|
% cut in govt purchases
|
% cut in govt transfers
|
% increase in all taxes
|
% increase in income tax
|
|
Austria
|
76.4
|
20.5
|
18.4
|
55.6
|
|
France
|
22.2
|
9.8
|
6.9
|
64.0
|
|
Germany
|
25.9
|
14.1
|
9.5
|
29.5
|
|
Ireland
|
-4.3
|
-4.4
|
-2.1
|
-4.8
|
|
Italy
|
49.1
|
13.3
|
10.5
|
28.2
|
|
Netherlands
|
28.7
|
22.3
|
8.9
|
15.6
|
|
Spain
|
62.2
|
17.0
|
14.5
|
44.9
|
|
Denmark
|
29.0
|
4.5
|
4.0
|
6.7
|
|
UK
|
9.7
|
9.5
|
2.7
|
9.5
|
Source: Ferguson & Kotlikoff,
Foreign Affairs March/00.
5.
The failure of reform
There have
been few moves in the Eurozone towards pension reform
despite the scale of the problem.
In its review
of the Broad Economic Policy Guidelines in March 2002,
the European Commission stated, Further reforms
are now strongly required in Belgium, France, Greece,
Spain, Italy and Portugal. While dialogue and consensus
amongst social partners are needed for reforms to succeed,
there is a disturbing trend in these countries for pensions
to be repeatedly postponed. With the post war baby boom
generation approaching retirement age, delays only increase
the cost of reform.
However, the
European Commission has admitted that reform has so far
failed: Progress towards safeguarding the effectiveness
and financial sustainability of pension systems, so as
to meet their social aims, has been mixed (Report
on the implementation of the 2001 Broad Economic Policy
Guidelines, 21 February 2002).
The pensions
crisis in Italy is particularly serious. The Government
is planning to redirect employees pension contributions
from company funds to private pension funds. However the
Italian government is in danger of replacing one black
hole in its public finances for another. The government
has not cut pensions pay-outs despite the fact that it
has promised employers that, in return for losing an access
to pension contributions, they will not have to make high
national insurance contributions when they take on new
staff (FT, 25 February 2002).
It is unlikely
that any movement towards pension reform will take place
in France until after the Presidential election. A new
report presented to Lionel Jospin in December did not
push for any significant reform of the French pay-as-you-go
system (FT, 6 December 2001).
6.
Why Britain would pay for the Eurozones pensions
if we joined EMU
The euro lobby
have claimed that the no bail out clause in
the Maastricht treaty would mean that we could join the
euro without being affected by the Eurozone pension crisis.
In reality, if we joined Economic and Monetary union we
would be made to pay for their pensions in several ways.
We would either be forced to pay directly to prop up failing
economies or pay indirectly via the interest rate.
As the
UKs outstanding public pension liabilities are substantially
below those of other EU members, there would be a risk
that if the United Kingdom joined a single currency British
taxpayers could be called upon to help finance the pay-as-you-go
pension obligations of other EMU members, or suffer the
consequences of being tied to interest rates on the single
currency that were forced up by the market pressures of
financing certain counties inherited pension commitments
(House of Commons Social Security Committee Unfunded
pension liabilities in the European Union 1996).
Another possibility
is that a group of the countries with the most severe
generational imbalance could pressure the European central
bank to pursue a looser monetary policy to inflate
away the debt. This effectively passes the debt
on to the private sector of the whole currency area (seigniorage)
by allowing the government to pay for goods and services
while reducing the real value of the money.
7.
Why the no-bail out clause is worthless
Even if there
were a watertight legal ban on bail-outs we would still
find ourselves paying. And the so-called no bail-out
clause may well not be effective.
First there
is a separate clause which can be used to bail out member
states in trouble. In the treaty of Nice this article
was brought under majority voting.
Where
a Member State is in difficulties or is seriously threatened
with severe difficulties caused by natural disasters or
exceptional occurrences beyond its control, the Council
may, acting by a qualified majority on a proposal from
the Commission, grant, under certain conditions, Community
financial assistance to the Member State concerned.
[Article 100(2) TEC]
Second, the
so called no bail-out clause itself contains
a bail out loophole.
1. The
Community shall not be liable for or assume the commitments
of central governments, regional, local or other public
authorities, other bodies governed by public law, or public
undertakings of any Member State, without prejudice to
mutual financial guarantees for the joint execution of
a specific project. A Member State shall not be liable
for or assume the commitments of central governments,
regional, local or other public authorities, other bodies
governed by public law or public undertakings of another
Member State, without prejudice to mutual financial guarantees
for the joint execution of a specific project.
2. If
necessary, the Council, acting in accordance with the
procedure referred to in Article 252, may specify definitions
for the application of the prohibitions referred to in
Article 101 and in this Article. [Article 103 TEC]
When Part 2 refers to Article 252,
this means the Qualified Majority Voting procedure. So how
the article is applied depends on part 2, which comes under
majority voting. This would allow member states in trouble
to outvote member states opposed to paying for other members
pensions.