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COMPARATIVE COSTS OF IA SYSTEMS. by Estelle James prepared for delivery at World Bank Institute Pension Reform Seminar, Budapest, 2001. Comparative costs of IA systems. Prefunding desirable--financial sustainability and long term saving
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COMPARATIVE COSTS OF IA SYSTEMS by Estelle James prepared for delivery at World Bank Institute Pension Reform Seminar, Budapest, 2001
Comparative costs of IA systems • Prefunding desirable--financial sustainability and long term saving • Danger of political manipulation and low returns to publicly managed funds • But decentralized individual accounts (IA’s) may have high administrative costs • What is the most cost-effective way to organize IA systems? • Key choice: retail or institutional market?
We compare:1) IA’s in retail market • Direct relation between individual & fund • Open entry, free choice, unrestricted fee • Retail funds incur high marketing costs • Administrative costs are 15-30% of new contributions, equivalent to .75-1.5% of assets per year for lifetime worker • Examples: Latin America, Poland, Hungary, Kazakhstan, UK, US mutual funds
2) IA’s in institutional market • Intermediary aggregates IA contributions; main competition is for market access: • competitive bidding over fees narrows eligible pension funds to small number • winners compete for workers’ money but are likely to get large money blocs • Best if R&C and investment are separated • Costs are half as much as in retail market < 10% of new contributions, < .5% of assets, even less with passive investing • Bolivia, industry funds in Australia, US TSP, US pension funds, Sweden
We found: Large cost saving possible in institutional market • Scale economies: Less excess capacity, especially at start-up and in small countries • Save on marketing expenses • More bargaining power, less oligopoly profit • Change product mix: Investment choices constrained to low cost strategies (passive) • If institutional market isn’t used market will eventually concentrate industry--but start-up and marketing costs, therefore fees, higher • But many caveats--will be discussed at end
Evidence from retail markets 1) Chile • Admin costs in Chile overstated but are higher than we would like • 15.6% of new contributions & final pension • Equivalent to .76% of assets per year over lifetime of full career worker • Snapshot: Annual costs 9% of assets initially, now 1.1% ($59 per acct); fees 1.3% • Marketing costs about half of total
Economies of scale • My analysis shows scale economies continue until 3 million affiliates, $15 billion per AFP--half total industry in Chile • Concentration is being achieved through market (previously 20, now 7-8 AFP’s) • Will probably fall to 5 AFP’s--scale economies but marketing costs continue • Institutional approach would get us there faster, and with lower equilibrium costs, but raises other problems
2) Latin America • Cost and fee is 15-25% of contributions • Per unit of assets 4-9% ($21-98 per acct) • Scale: Costs lower for larger AFP’s • Expenses smaller in Bolivia (institutional approach) and Chile (size, experience, concentration)
3) U.S. Mutual funds • Many years of operation, very large, service • Costs & fees more dispersed but similar to Chile: average = 1.4% of assets • Costs are lower for: larger funds, no-loads (no commissions), passive investments • Marketing expenses about 50% of total cost • Higher costs don’t lead to higher returns
Institutional market--1) U.S. • Large investors pay .04-.08% of assets for passive mgt, .35-.65% for active mgt. + .1-.15% for other expenses. Half retail costs, lower for large institutions. • Reasons for lower fees: • Large money blocs--scale economies • Low marketing costs • Low R&C costs • Heavy use of passive investment • Better information, bargaining power
Long Run Costs of Retail and Institutional Markets in US (in basis points)
2) Bolivia • International bidding process, 2 winners, no switching (greater entry & switching later) • Fee structure: 5% contributions+.43% assets • Equivalent to: .56% for full career worker • Snapshot today: 3% of assets, $16 per account • Much cheaper than Chile at start-up
Bolivia: caveats • Is saving due to competitive bidding & no marketing or to lumping IA’s with large privatization assets & cross-subsidization? • Potential problems: service, performance incentives, regulation, unexpected contingencies, rebidding problems
3) U.S. thrift savings plan • Voluntary IA plan for federal government employees with matching contributions • Competitive bidding with 3 portfolios, all passive management, 1 company • Costs: .11% of assets or $30 per account • Is saving due to competitive bidding, limited choice (index funds) or hidden costs?
4) Sweden • Centralized R&C: 2.5% IA contributions go to public agency, then reallocated (blind) to mutual funds selected by workers • Mutual funds must accept agency’s fees--sliding scale, depending on funds attracted • Estimated expected fee=.8% (.5% in lg run) • lower than Chilean AFP’s, US or Swedish mutual funds because less marketing • higher than TSP because greater choice
What does the evidence tell us? • Economies of scale: Cost per account falls as # affiliates grow, cost per asset unit falls as assets grow; industry consolidates. This happens in retail and institutional markets • Institutional costs lower than retail--competitive bidding limits number of funds, gains from scale economies early, low marketing costs, constrain choice to low cost products, bargaining power • Costs <.5% of assets annually; would reduce pensions<10%, half as much as retail market, even less with passive investing
Trade-offs and caveats • May choose wrong number of funds • Performance incentives hard to specify • Slow to innovate, adapt to new conditions • Difficult to handle unforeseen contingencies • Possible corruption, collusion, regulatory capture • Credible rebidding strategy needed with fixed costs staying in system; or first entrants have long run monopolistic advantage • But low cost IA system is feasible; especially useful at start-up and for small countries or contribution base
What is the relevance to ECA/FSU? • As you choose your new systems, don’t automatically choose the retail model just because many other countries have done so • Reforming countries, especially small countries, should consider pros and cons of the institutional approach, to attract foreign expertise and cut administrative costs