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TITLE
"Deficits, Empty Individual Accounts, and Transition Costs:
Restructuring Challenges Facing China's Pension System,"
Journal of Insurance Issues,
Qixiang Sun and John W. Maxwell, Fall 2002, Vol. 25, No. 2, pp.
103-126. Entire article in
Acrobat format.
ABSTRACT
Driven by the twin pressures of economic reform and an aging population, China
began to reform its pay-as-you-go (PAYG) pension system in the mid-1980s.
In 1997, the Chinese government issued a document to formally establish a new,
partially funded pension system for urban workers. The new system,
featuring a social pooling account and individual accounts, was developed with
the joint goals of equity and efficiency in mind. To date, however, the
system has failed to achieve these goals. Individual accounts are
currently in debt and are accumulating mounting annual deficits. The same
is also true of the social pooling account. We identify four major drivers
behind the system's current problems--namely, rapid growth in the number of
retirees, the economic decline of the State sector, a decline in payroll tax
collection rates, and underreported wage levels. We then examine the linkages
between these drivers and the costs arising from the transition from the PAYG
system to the partially funded system. On the basis of our analysis, we
develop and analyze several recommendations designed to ensure that the new
system achieves its goals. Recommendations include government asset sales
to fund transition costs, bond issuing, a reduction of the system's replacement
ratio, and an increase in the rate of return on pension assets.
[Keywords: Pension, pay-as-you-go, individual accounts, replacement ratio]
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