As people live longer, delaying retirement helps to maintain pensions at a financially sustainable level. Declining fertility also puts pressure on pension systems by reducing the number of workers contributing to support a growing population of retired people. These challenges can be tackled in a number of ways, including by increasing pension contribution rates, reducing pension benefits or delaying retirement. The OECD provides data and analysis on a wide range of pension policies to inform policy makers and other stakeholders on solutions to today’s challenges for asset-backed pension systems and to ensure their soundness and stability.
Pensions and insurance
Well-functioning pensions and insurance systems are vital for stable economies and individual financial security. In the face of challenges like population ageing and climate disasters, reforms are necessary to maintain the robustness and soundness of pensions and insurance systems. The OECD offers guidance on system design, regulation, supervision, risk management, and retirement planning.
Key messages
Pension and insurance systems are facing major changes and risks, including demographic shifts, climate disasters, cybersecurity threats, pandemics, technological advancements including artificial intelligence, and changing consumer expectations and lifestyles. Pensions and insurance systems need to adapt to these trends.
The OECD monitors developments in the pension and insurance systems and provides comparable statistics and international best practices to help policy makers, regulators and other stakeholders monitor and evaluate the design and operation of insurance and pension markets.
The effective financial management of disaster risks is a key public policy challenge for governments around the world, particularly for households and businesses faced with significant exposures to such risks and/or limited capacity to manage the financial impacts of natural and/or man-made hazards, such as floods, earthquakes, cyclones, terrorist attacks, industrial and technological accidents, and pandemics. Finding solutions to address climate-related risks and risks linked to cyber-attacks are high on the policy agenda.
The OECD undertakes analysis of the role of insurance – and financial markets more generally – in providing disaster risk financing tools and provides guidance on building financial resilience to disaster risks within the economy.
Context
Pension entitlements
For average earners with a full career starting from age 22 in 2022, net income after retirement at the normal retirement age is 61.4% of pre-retirement income on average across the OECD. These net replacement rates vary from under 35% in Australia, Estonia and Lithuania to 90% or more in Greece, the Netherlands, Portugal and Türkiye.
Whilst the gross replacement rate gives a clear indication of the design of the pension system, the net replacement matters more to individuals, as it refers to the percentage of a worker’s disposable income in retirement in comparison to when working.
Rise of assets earmarked for retirement 2001-2022
The volume of assets earmarked for retirement more than tripled between 2001 and 2022, meaning more retirement assets to complement retirement savings, and more resources available to people in their old age. There are two main reasons for this. The first is the growing recognition of the importance of retirement planning and the need for individuals to save for their future by diversifying their retirement financing sources. The second is the implementation by governments and regulatory bodies of measures such as tax incentives for retirement savings, mandatory participation in pension plans, and reforms to ensure the sustainability of pension systems.
Insurance plays a critical role in economic activity
The amount of premiums individuals and businesses pay to acquire insurance coverage has grown over the years, in line with GDP growth, highlighting the critical role that insurance plays in underwriting economic activity. This premium growth is the likely result of an increased need for insurance coverage to support growing economic activity, while accounting for increases in the value of assets, higher risk for some types of coverage, as well as inflation in recent years. The penetration of the insurance sector in the economy is uneven around the world and still low in many jurisdictions, which reflects the significant financial protection gaps for many types of risks.
Related publications
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15 December 2023
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19 December 2022
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