Projection methods and scenarios for public and private pension information
Content
Public pensions – the primary pillar of old-age income provision – will, in the future, be less
generous than they have been in the past, in particular owing to the impact of demographic
change. The pension gap is supposed to be plugged by the second and third pillars of pension
provision. However, people require reliable planning information if they are to exercise
greater individual responsibility. It is therefore absolutely essential that adequate information
is made available about the level of pension benefits that will be generated by each pillar of
old-age pension provision.
This paper outlines a number of different means of presenting the level of future pensions and
the assumptions on which such extrapolations are necessarily based. Our work is based on an
assumed average rate of inflation of 1.5% and an average rate of real income growth not
exceeding 1.5%. This last figure is derived from calculations made in the framework of a
macroeconomic simulation model. This model also shows that while the funded pillar of oldage
pension provision is not entirely immune to population aging, it is not substantially
threatened by a substantial decrease in stock market prices, the so-called “asset meltdown”.
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