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Government Pensions “Down Under” Innovations from Australia. INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR PENSION SCHEMES FOR CIVIL SERVANTS AND PENSION FUNDS Itamaraty Palace, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Esplanada dos Ministérios, Brasília, Brazil, 01-02 October 2003. David Lindeman Consultant to OECD.
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Government Pensions “Down Under”Innovations from Australia INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR PENSION SCHEMES FOR CIVIL SERVANTS AND PENSION FUNDS Itamaraty Palace, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Esplanada dos Ministérios, Brasília, Brazil, 01-02 October 2003 David LindemanConsultant to OECD
Antipodean Uniqueness • Australian pension system is not quite like any other. • National “old age” benefit is (sort of) “means-tested” • In addition, since 1992 there is a “superannuation guarantee” • Superannuation is another (antique) word for retirement benefit • Guarantee in this context is really a mandate on employers to make contributions to a funded retirement scheme at least as much as the “guarantee” (or else pay tax surcharge, plus interest)
National “old age” benefit • Significant threshold below which assets (not including house) are not considered. Separate lower threshold for homeowners. • Pensions and earnings are subject to either income test or assets test, whichever produces lower pension. Income is imputed from certain financial assets at a stipulated rate. • “Claw back” rate has been reduced to (now) 40 percent, above an income threshold. All financial assets deemed to produce an income stream. • Beginning to resemble a pure “citizens’ pensions” as in next door New Zealand. • Not surprisingly, superannuation is most always taken as lump sum.
Superannuation Guarantee • Started in 1992 in context labor negotiations, but now has become a key part of retirement policy • Applies to public sector employers as well as private sector • As of 2002, mandated rate is 9 percent. There is no guaranteed return – pure DC risk, unless employer chooses to offer DB plan instead. • Many employers offer more generous pensions, including DB pensions • DB sector in Australia is declining, however, as in US and elsewhere • Monitored by two different financial regulatory agencies and by the tax office • Very complex and unique taxation rules • Some DB or DC annuity payout at upper income levels and government, but most households take lump sums.
Commonwealth Government Retirement Scheme • Applies to Commonwealth government workers (i.e., federal, national level). • Public Sector Superannuation (PSS) Scheme, which is applicable to workers hired after July 1, 1990. • Managed by Commonwealth Superannuation Administration (ComSuper) which manages pre-PSS scheme and military pension schemes • Assets are managed through various investment managers • Along with other “supers” active involvement in corporate governance. • Innovative combination of defined benefit and defined contribution concepts. • Similar to hybrid DB-DC “cash balance” plans in the US • Similar to how most “notional defined contribution” or NDC plans work in operation – that is, really hybrid and not literally DC • Similar to “severance pay” schemes in many countries • Advertised by ComSuper as a defined benefit plan
PSS Design • Ongoing employee and employer contributions with credited rates of return, but generally irrelevant to final benefit. • Exception: credited rates of return are applied to worker contributions rolled in from previous jobs. • The higher a worker’s contribution rate, the greater his or her eventual lump sum benefit • Formula for lump sum benefit has three elements • Final average salary or FAS (last three years), • Worker’s contribution rate for each year, • Employer “multiple” that corresponds to a given contribution rate • Frontloaded to give more weight to the first 10 years – first 10 years always treated as if 5 % contribution rate • May be taken as lump sum (three installments), an indexed annuity, a preserved amount, or in some combination.
Example • Actual accrual • 5 years at 10% (5 x 0.31)= 1.55 • 7 years at 8% (7 x 0.27)= 1.89 • Total after 12 years= 3.44 x FAS • Benefit accrual test over total period of service to determine maximum benefit • 10 years at 5% (10 x .21)= 2.10 • 2 years at 10% (2 x .31)= 0.62 • Total after 12 years= 2.72 x FAS • The actual Benefit Multiple (3.44) exceeds the maximum allowable multiple (2.72) by 0.72. The employee component of this excess is 0.36, that is, half the difference (0.72 ÷ 2 = 0.36). • To obtain the Benefit Multiple to be used in this example, add the excess employee component (0.36) to the maximum benefit (2.72), and the resulting 3.08 is the Benefit Multiple allowed. • 3.08 x FAS of 60,000 A$ = 180,480 lump sum
Contribution rate and corresponding multiple* *but first 10 years always weighted as if 5 percent contribution rate
Other public worker schemes in Australia • Also, new military scheme since 1991 that is a combination of an -- • employer defined benefit • defined contribution based on enlisted person’s own contributions that can vary from (at least) 5 percent to 10 percent • preservation requirements through age 55 • (compare to new TSP option for US military) • Australian states (e.g., New South Wales) and local governments have own schemes for their workers that generally exceed the “superannuation guarantee.” • separate schemes for universities • In general, a trend at all levels of government -- • from only or mostly traditional defined benefit before 1980 • to mixed DB and DC systems from 1980 to mid-90s • to purely DC systems or “hybrid” systems like PSS at Commonwealth level • (same trend in US but less pronounced)