1 / 17

STATE OF ISRAEL MINISTRY OF FINANCE PRIVATE PENSIONS IN ISRAEL

STATE OF ISRAEL MINISTRY OF FINANCE PRIVATE PENSIONS IN ISRAEL. Overview. Overview. Multiple employer plans; Competition for new members; Comprehensive benefits. Recent Major Reforms. Normal Retirement Ages; Insolvent Defined Benefit Plans; Plans Established After 1994;

ernst
Download Presentation

STATE OF ISRAEL MINISTRY OF FINANCE PRIVATE PENSIONS IN ISRAEL

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. STATE OF ISRAEL MINISTRY OF FINANCE PRIVATE PENSIONS IN ISRAEL

  2. Overview

  3. Overview • Multiple employer plans; • Competition for new members; • Comprehensive benefits.

  4. Recent Major Reforms • Normal Retirement Ages; • Insolvent Defined Benefit Plans; • Plans Established After 1994; • Investment Liberalization.

  5. Normal Retirement Ages • Starting 2004; • Increase by 4 months per year; • Females: 60 64 • Males: 65 67 • Private and public pensions, both funded and unfunded.

  6. Insolvent Plans: Scope • 400 thousand active members and beneficiaries in 8 plans; • Deficit of 25 billion dollars; • Approx. 25% to be funded by employers, members and beneficiaries; • Approx. 75% to be funded by government.

  7. Insolvent Plans: Employers, Members and Beneficiaries • One plan document, equal treatment for all; • Contributions: 17.5% 20.5% of salary; • Restricted increases in pensionable salary; • Lower future benefit accruals; • Fewer cost of living adjustments; • 1.75% charge on benefit payments.

  8. Insolvent Plans: Government Funding • Subsidized interest on non-negotiable bonds; • Fixed annual contributions over 35 years instead of pay-as-you-go; • Partial coverage of asset risks.

  9. Insolvent Plans: Funding Rules • Cumulative actuarial gains and losses: • Up to a limit: carried forward from year to year; • Excess: absorbed by retroactive benefit adjustments.

  10. Insolvent Plans: Accounting Rules • Dynamic risk-free discount rates; • Fair value of liabilities and assets.

  11. Plans Established After 1994 • 400 thousand active members and beneficiaries in 18 plans; • 2004 conversion from DB to hybrid plans; • Assets allocated between members and beneficiaries; • Members: individual account balances; • Beneficiaries: monthly pensions payable from the plan.

  12. Plans Est. After 1994: Member Contributions • Transparent components: • Retirement savings; • Pre-retirement death and disability (vary by age and sex); • Expense.

  13. Plans Est. After 1994: Member Account Balances • Monthly update for investment return; • Annual update for demographic experience; • Conversion to pension benefit at retirement, death or disability; • Dynamic conversion factors.

  14. Plans Est. After 1994: Beneficiaries • Segregated assets; • Dynamic discount rates; • Gains/Losses from assets or “mismatch”: • Less than 1% of liabilities: carried forward; • Excess: may be phased-in over 5 years; • Other gains/losses absorbed by benefit adjustments.

  15. Plans Est. After 1994: Pension Immunization Example • Naïve investment strategy; • Real interest rates: 4% 2%; • Beneficiary Assets: 14%; • Beneficiary Liabilities: 16%; • Loss: 2%; • Buffer: 1%; • Excess: 1%, phased-in over 5 years.

  16. Investment Liberalization • Plans est. before 1995: easing of portfolio limits; • Plans est. after 1994: virtually all investments permitted.

  17. Thank You

More Related