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Report to the Ranking Minority Member, Special Committee on Aging, U.S. 

Senate:



United States General Accounting Office:



GAO:



February 2003:



Olders Workers:



Policies of Other Nations to Increase Labor Force Participation:



GAO-03-307:



GAO Highlights:



Highlights of GAO-03-307, a report to the

Ranking Minority Member, Special

Committee on Aging, United States

Senate:



Why GAO Did This Study:



In recent years, the challenges of aging populations have become a

topic of increasing concern to the developed nations. These

challenges range from the fiscal imbalance in national pension

systems caused by fewer workers having to provide benefits for

greater numbers of retirees, to potential economic strains due to

shortages of skilled workers. Part of the solution to these challenges

could be greater older worker labor force participation.



GAO identified three nations– Japan, Sweden, and the United

Kingdom--that had displayed high levels of older worker labor force

participation in the past and were now implementing policy reforms

that continued to emphasize the importance of older workers. The

experiences of these nations suggest that the nature of the

reforms, the public availability and transparency of information on 

the reforms, and the strength of the national economy play key roles 

in extending older worker labor force participation.



What GAO Found:



The retirement policy reforms in Japan, Sweden, and the United Kingdom

are expected to lead to higher labor force participation of older 

workers.



*  Japan is facing the most severe aging trend of the nations GAO 

studied, as its median population age is projected to be 28 percent 

higher than the United States in the coming decades. In response, 

Japan has enacted substantial benefit cuts to its national pension 

system by raising the eligibility age and reducing benefit levels to 

maintain fund solvency. Due to these changes, some Japanese workers 

will have to work to later ages.



*  Sweden undertook the most significant reform by changing the 

structure of its national pension system from a traditional pay-as-

you-go defined benefit plan, like the U.S. Social Security program, 

to a system where participants’ benefits are more in line with their 

contributions. These reforms are expected to extend workers’ careers 

by rewarding longer labor force participation with higher benefits. 

The system also incorporates flexibility by automatically adjusting 

benefits to changes in the economy and life expectancy to preserve 

financial stability.



*  The United Kingdom will phase-in an increase in the women’s 

national pension eligibility age so that it will be equal to the 

higher male age of 65. It also revised its benefit formula to raise 

the annual incremental increase for those who defer drawing their 

pension benefits. These changes either reward continued employment 

or discourage earlier retirement, and thus may promote continued 

labor force participation.



However, although incentives to work to later ages have been created

through reforms to their national and employer provided pension 

systems, officials from each nation stressed that these policy changes 

must be accompanied by labor market reforms and economic growth to 

provide job opportunities to older workers if they are to be effective.



www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-307.



To view the full report, including the scope

and methodology, click on the link above.

For more information, contact Barbara

Bovbjerg at (202) 512-7215 or

bovbjergb@gao.gov.



Contents:



Letter:



Results in Brief:



Background:



Adverse Labor Force and Demographic Trends Less Pronounced in the 

United States but Pose a Challenge:



Key Elements of Reforms in Other Nations Expected to Increase Labor 

Force Participation of Older Workers:



Experiences of Other Nations Suggest That the Nature of Reforms Plays a 

Key Role in Increasing Labor Force Participation of Older Workers:



Concluding Observations:



Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:



Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:



Analyzed Statistical Data:



Reviewed Literature and Conducted Interviews with Experts:



Conducted Site Visits in Three Foreign Countries:



Appendix II: Japan:



Japanese Pensions and Labor Market Policies:



Old-Age and Disability Pensions:



Labor Market Policies:



Appendix III: Sweden:



Swedish Pensions and Labor Market Policies:



Old-Age and Disability Pensions:



Labor Market Policies:



Appendix IV: The United Kingdom:



United Kingdom Pensions and Labor Market Policies:



Old-Age and Disability Pensions:



Labor Market Policies:



Appendix V: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:



GAO Contacts:



Acknowledgments:



Figures:



Figure1: Labor Force Participation Rates for Persons Age 50 to 64 in 

High-Income Nations, 2000 and 2010:



Figure 2: Labor Force Participation Rates for Persons Age 65+ in High-

Income Nations, 2000 and 2010:



Figure 3: Labor Force Participation Rates for Men Age 50-64 in High-

Income Nations, 1950 to 2010:



Figure 4: Labor Force Participation Rates for Women Age 50 to 64 in 

High-Income Nations, 1950 to 2010:



Figure 5: Median Age of the Population in High-Income Nations, 1980 to 

2050:



Figure 6: Elderly Dependency Ratio in High-Income Nations, 1950 to 

2050:



Abbreviations:



ADEA: Age Discrimination in Employment Act:



CPI: Consumer Price Index:



CSIS: Center for Strategic and International Studies:



DI: Disability Insurance:



EPF: employee pension funds:



IB: Incapacity Benefit:



IVB: Invalidity Benefit:



ILO: International Labour Organization:



MIG: Minimum Income Guarantee:



NDC: notional defined contribution:



OECD: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development:



PBGC: Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation:



TQPPtax-qualified pension plans:



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February 13, 2003:



The Honorable John Breaux

Ranking Minority Member

Special Committee on Aging

United States Senate:



Dear Senator Breaux:



As is the case in developed nations around the world, the aging of the 

U.S. population will pose challenges to our national economy and 

retirement income programs. Organizations as diverse as the World Bank, 

the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the 

United States Federal Reserve, and others have studied these 

challenges, which range from the growing fiscal pressures in national 

pension systems[Footnote 1] caused by fewer workers having to provide 

benefits for greater numbers of retirees, to potential economic strains 

due to shortages of skilled workers as they exit the labor force. Most 

of these organizations believe that greater labor force participation 

by older workers can be part of the solution to mitigate the adverse 

effects of aging populations.



In light of the economic and labor force challenges posed by an aging 

population, you asked us to draw upon the experience of other high-

income industrialized nations in examining the following questions: (1) 

How does the United States compare with other high-income nations with 

regard to recent and projected trends in key demographic and labor 

force characteristics? (2) How are recently enacted retirement policy 

reforms in high-income nations expected to affect the labor force 

participation rate of older workers?[Footnote 2] (3) What did these 

nations learn from enacting policies that may increase the labor force 

participation of older workers?



To answer these questions, we compiled and analyzed demographic and 

labor force data from the OECD, the United Nations Population Division, 

and the International Labour Organization (ILO), highlighting data from 

the United States and seven other comparison OECD nations.[Footnote 3] 

In addition, we consulted with individual experts in national pension 

policy and conducted an extensive review of the international 

retirement literature. On the basis of this preliminary research, we 

identified three nations--Japan, Sweden, and the United Kingdom--that 

had displayed high levels of older worker labor force participation in 

the past and were now implementing policy reforms that continued to 

emphasize the importance of older worker labor force participation. We 

then examined these nations’ pension systems--both national and 

employer-provided--and labor market policies through interviews, 

literature reviews, and site visits. We met with key government 

officials concerning pension and labor market policy, representatives 

from employer organizations and labor unions, and well-known scholars 

who have studied older worker issues in each nation. We conducted our 

work between February 2002 and January 2003 in accordance with 

generally accepted government auditing standards. For more details on 

our scope and methodology, see appendix I. For more details on the 

pension systems and labor market policies of our sample of nations, see 

appendixes II to IV.



Results in Brief:



The recent and projected adverse labor force and demographic trends for 

most other high-income nations will be less pronounced in the United 

States, but the aging of the population will still pose a challenge to 

retirement income programs. Although U.S. labor force participation 

rates for older workers are not as high as in previous decades, ILO 

data for 2000 show that they are higher than most other high-income 

nations. The situation is similar for demographic trends. In 2000, for 

example, the median age of the U.S. population was 36, which was 

slightly lower than the other high-income nations we examined. However, 

by 2050 the projected U.S. median age of 41 will be 10 or more years 

lower than the median ages projected for four of the seven other 

comparison nations. Relatively higher fertility and immigration rates 

are two factors contributing to the comparatively slower aging of the 

U.S. population. The United State’s lower median age contributes to an 

elderly dependency ratio, the ratio of persons older than 60 to persons 

age 15-59, that will be between 6 and 36 percentage points lower than 

that of the other comparison nations by 2050. However, the U.S. ratio 

at that time will still be almost double its rate in 2000, primarily 

due to the aging of the baby boom generation.



The retirement policy reforms in some high-income nations are expected 

to lead to higher labor force participation of older workers. National 

pension reforms in Japan, Sweden, and the United Kingdom that increase 

eligibility ages, reduce pension benefits, and increase benefits when 

claimed at a later age may encourage or require older workers to remain 

in the labor force longer. National and employer-provided pension 

reforms in each nation have moved toward the adoption of defined 

contribution features.[Footnote 4] Such changes may also tend to foster 

greater labor force participation by older workers as the link between 

contributions and retirement benefits is more transparent as benefits 

grow in line with contributions and returns on account balances. In 

addition, two of these nations have taken steps to reduce the use of 

disability insurance as a path to early retirement by tightening the 

eligibility requirements for disability pensions. Each of the three 

nations has begun to study or enact policies that have the objective of 

reducing the barriers to employment at older ages. Such reforms include 

loosening or eliminating mandatory retirement age standards, 

encouraging the elimination of age discrimination in employment, 

improving older worker training, providing employment earnings 

incentives, and exploring quality-of-work life issues such as the 

flexibility of work arrangements.



The experiences of other nations we studied suggest that the scope and 

comprehensiveness of reforms, the transparency and availability of 

information, and the strength of the economy play important roles in 

encouraging labor force participation by older workers. Officials from 

these nations agree that for reforms to be successful in increasing the 

labor force participation of older workers, they should be 

comprehensive in scope. This would suggest, for example, that any 

reforms in the national pension systems be accompanied by reforms in 

the employer-provided pension system, in related social insurance 

programs (such as disability insurance) as well as in labor market 

policies. Such comprehensive reform should also be complementary in 

nature, so for example, changes in labor market policies (such as 

prohibiting age discrimination in employment against older workers) 

would reinforce the purpose of national pension reforms that encourage 

older workers to work longer. There was also agreement that reforms 

directed at older workers cannot achieve their intended purpose unless 

workers can recognize and understand the incentives being provided. 

Reforms must, therefore, be transparent, and workers must receive 

information about the changes that is understandable and useful to 

permit workers to make knowledgeable decisions. Finally, officials from 

all the nations agreed that a strong national economy that provides 

employment opportunities for all workers was a key component for the 

success of reforms that can raise the labor force participation by 

older workers.



Background:



The number of persons in the United States over age 55 will grow 

substantially over the next two decades. Due to the aging of the baby 

boom generation,[Footnote 5] older persons are becoming an increasingly 

significant proportion of all persons and workers. In 2002, the U.S. 

Census Bureau estimates that there were 61 million people over age 55 

and their numbers are projected to grow to 103 million in 2025. This 

growth will increase the percentage of the population that is over 55 

from 22 percent to 30 percent.



This shift in population age will affect the composition of the labor 

force. The number of older workers in the United States is projected to 

grow substantially over the next two decades, and they will become an 

increasingly significant proportion of all workers. In June of 2002, 

there were 19.2 million workers over age 55 and their numbers are 

projected to increase to 31.8 million by 2015. This growth is projected 

to increase the percentage of the workforce that is over 55 from 14 

percent in 2002 to nearly 20 percent in 2015.[Footnote 6]



The projected growth in the percentage of the labor force over 55 will 

occur among both men and women. This would shift an earlier trend among 

older men, whose labor force participation declined from the 1950s 

until the mid-1990s. Since the mid-1990s, labor force participation 

among older men has been relatively constant at 67 percent for men age 

55 to 64 and 17 percent for men age 65 and older. The Bureau of Labor 

Statistics now projects these levels to rise to 69 percent and nearly 

20 percent by 2015. The expected growth in labor force participation 

rates among older women would continue the current long-term trends of 

increases in their participation. For example, the percent of women age 

55 to 64 in the labor force has steadily increased since the mid-1980s, 

from 42 to 52 percent in 2000, while rates among women 65 and older 

have grown from 7 to 9 percent in 2000. BLS projects these numbers to 

increase to 61 percent and 10 percent by 2015.



There are many factors that influence a person’s decision to work at 

older ages. One key factor is financial incentives created by the rules 

regarding eligibility for benefits from the national pension system--

Social Security in the United States. The decision to continue working 

is primarily related to the trade-off between earnings and leisure 

time. The availability of Social Security benefits allows workers to 

substitute non-labor income for their earnings and to enjoy more 

leisure. Depending on the eligibility rules and schedule of benefits, 

it can be more or less advantageous for workers to retire at an earlier 

age rather than to continue employment. The eligibility age for full 

Social Security benefits is currently 65 years and 8 months and rising, 

with reduced benefits available at age 62.[Footnote 7] If a person 

elects to start receiving benefits at age 62, 63, or 64, the total 

lifetime benefits[Footnote 8] they receive will be roughly 

equivalent.[Footnote 9] Even though delaying receipt of benefits for 1 

year is on average “actuarially equivalent or neutral,” data from the 

mid-1990s show that most people (60 percent) elect to start benefits at 

age 62. These benefits can be reduced if the beneficiary has earnings 

above the income threshold when they are age 62-64. There are no 

earnings limitations on Social Security benefits above age 65.



Another important retirement incentive is eligibility for employer-

provided pension benefits.[Footnote 10] In the United States, about 

half of the labor force has some type of employer-provided pension 

coverage.[Footnote 11] Employer-provided pensions are customarily 

classified into two major categories: defined benefit and defined 

contribution plans. A defined benefit plan promises a retirement 

benefit amount that is usually expressed as an annual payment, derived 

from a formula based on a worker’s years of employment, earnings, or 

both.[Footnote 12] In the United States, benefits in defined benefit 

plans are insured by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC). 

Under a defined contribution plan, the retirement benefit is expressed 

as an account balance for the individual employee.[Footnote 13] This 

balance results from contributions that the employer, the worker, or 

both make, as well as from subsequent investment returns on the assets 

in the account. Under a defined contribution plan, retirement benefits 

are not guaranteed by the PBGC, and employees bear the risks of 

investment.



As different types of pension plans, defined benefit and defined 

contribution plans provide workers with different incentives for either 

retiring or continuing work. Defined benefit plans often provide 

incentives for early retirement because they often do not increase 

retirement benefits in-line with additional years of work with the firm 

after the early retirement age.[Footnote 14] Under defined contribution 

plans, benefits can continue to increase, consistent with continued 

contributions and positive rates of return on assets. Since workers’ 

accounts increase in size proportional to the amounts that are 

contributed by them or by their employers, they do not create 

incentives to retire based on the benefit formula.[Footnote 15] In the 

past, a greater percentage of pension-plan participants were covered by 

defined benefit plans. In 1998, according to the Employee Benefits 

Research Institute, 20 percent of households had defined benefit 

coverage only; 57 percent had defined contribution coverage only; and 

23 percent had both types of coverage.



Health status and occupation are other important factors that influence 

the decision to work at older ages.[Footnote 16] As people age, they 

tend to encounter more health problems that make it more difficult to 

continue working. Thus, jobs that are physically demanding, usually 

found in the blue-collar and service sectors of the economy, can be 

difficult for many people to perform at older ages. Moreover, health 

status and occupation are often interrelated since health can be 

affected by work environment. Blue-collar and service workers, such as 

construction workers and janitors, often face physically demanding work 

environments that may affect their health status; these consequently 

lead to health impairments that affect their ability to work to older 

ages. Although this group continues to face problems, there is evidence 

that the health of older persons generally is improving. This suggests 

that, compared with previous generations, today’s older age population 

has an increased capacity to work to older ages.



Although the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) protects 

workers in the United States age 40 and older from employment 

discrimination,[Footnote 17] labor force participation is not solely an 

older worker’s decision, as there must also be a demand for their 

labor. Employers’ perceptions of older people may form barriers to 

older workers’ retaining their current jobs, finding new jobs if they 

are laid off, or re-entering the labor force after retiring if their 

retirement income is inadequate. For example, some employers believe 

that older workers have lower productivity than younger workers, 

generate higher costs for employee benefits such as health care and 

pensions, and represent higher costs for recruitment and training since 

they have less potential time to recoup these up front costs compared 

with a younger worker. Encountering these obstacles could discourage 

older workers and influence their decision to retire.



The labor force decisions of older persons are also influenced by the 

availability of alternative employment arrangements. In the United 

States, there has been interest among older workers who wish to work 

longer in seeking employment arrangements that result in “phased 

retirement” or “bridge employment.” Phased retirement usually refers to 

staying with a career job on a part-time or part-year schedule while 

phasing out employment over a number of years to complete retirement. 

Bridge employment usually refers to leaving a career job and moving to 

part-time work with another firm in the same or different industry, 

prior to complete retirement. In the United States, nearly half of all 

workers age 55 to 65 utilize a bridge job before completely retiring.



Older Americans receive income through a variety of sources, with the 

Social Security program constituting the largest share for most 

persons. In 2000, 90 percent of households with a person age 65 or 

older received Social Security benefits. These benefits constitute more 

than 50 percent of total income for 64 percent of these households. 

Social Security benefits, on average, replace about 40 percent of a 

program-covered individual’s pre-retirement income, if benefits are 

taken at age 62.[Footnote 18] Other major sources of income for older 

Americans are asset income (received by 59 percent of households), 

retirement benefits other than Social Security (41 percent), and 

earnings (22 percent). Social Security represents 41 percent of 

aggregate income, earnings represent 23 percent, retirement benefits 

other than Social Security are 18 percent, and asset income is 17.5 

percent.



In the United States, the Disability Insurance (DI) program provides 

compensation for the reduced earnings for individuals who have worked 

long enough and recently enough to become insured and have lost their 

ability to work because of a severe, long-term disability. DI provides 

benefits to persons who are not able to perform substantial gainful 

activity due to a physical or mental impairment. DI is not a major 

source of income for a significant portion of older persons in the 

United States. In 2000,

7 percent of the population age 50-59 received DI benefits.[Footnote 

19]



Adverse Labor Force and Demographic Trends Less Pronounced in the 

United States but Pose a Challenge:



The recent and projected labor force participation and population aging 

trends for most other high-income nations[Footnote 20] will be less 

pronounced in the United States, but the aging of the population will 

nevertheless pose a challenge to retirement income programs. ILO data 

for 2000 show that the labor force participation rates for older U.S. 

workers, though not as high as in previous decades, will be higher than 

in most other high-income nations. It is expected that, because of 

higher fertility and immigration rates, the U.S. population will also 

age more slowly than other high-income nations. However, even though 

the population of the United States is not aging as rapidly as other 

countries, the old-age dependency ratio--the number of people over the 

age of 60 for every 100 working age people (ages 15-59)--is projected 

to rise from 19 in 2000 to 35 in 2050.[Footnote 21] This near doubling 

of the old-age dependency ratio will strain the resources of programs 

that pay for retirement.



Older Workers’ Labor Force Participation Expected to Decline in Most 

High-Income Nations, although Rates Expected to Remain Relatively High 

in the United States:



Even though the labor force participation of workers age 50 to 64 is 

expected to decline in most high-income nations, including the United 

States, between 2000 and 2010 (see fig.1), the United States has and 

will continue to have higher rates of labor force participation for 

older workers than most other high-income nations.[Footnote 22] In some 

high-income nations, such as France, Germany, and Italy, about 2 to 4 

percent of persons age 65 and older participated in the labor force. In 

contrast, the labor force participation rate in 2000 among U.S. workers 

age 65 and over was 

10 percent (see fig. 2), the second highest labor force participation 

rate among key high-income nations and 1.4 percentage points higher 

than the aggregate for all 23 nations the World Bank has designated as 

high-income. Labor force participation among U.S. workers age 50-64 was 

66 percent (see fig. 1). This trails only Sweden’s (79 percent) and 

Japan’s (73 percent) rates for this age group.[Footnote 23]



Figure 1: Labor Force Participation Rates for Persons Age 50 to 64 in 

High-Income Nations, 2000 and 2010:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]



Figure 2: Labor Force Participation Rates for Persons Age 65+ in High-

Income Nations, 2000 and 2010:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]



The relatively high rate of labor force participation by older U.S. 

workers is being sustained by an increasing percentage of older women 

working. In the United States, as in other high-income nations, labor 

force participation among older men has declined since 1950 and, for 

the most part, is projected to continue declining through 2010 (see 

fig. 3). During that same period, however, labor force participation 

among older women is projected generally to rise (see fig. 4). In the 

United States, labor force participation among women age 50-64 will 

nearly double from 1950 to 2010, increasing from 31 percent to 58 

percent.[Footnote 24]



Figure 3: Labor Force Participation Rates for Men Age 50-64 in High-

Income Nations, 1950 to 2010:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]



Figure 4: Labor Force Participation Rates for Women Age 50 to 64 in 

High-Income Nations, 1950 to 2010:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]



Adverse Demographic Trends Less Pronounced in the United States 

Compared with Other High-Income Nations:



The size of the baby boom generation, rising life expectancy and 

declining fertility are expected to contribute to a rising median age 

in high-income nations. Because the baby boom generation is large in 

number, a growing proportion of the populations in high-income nations 

will be over 60. In the United States, for example, this will be the 

case for about a quarter of the population. Moreover, as this 

generation has grown older, life expectancy has increased in all high-

income nations. From 1955 to 

2000, life expectancy in the United States increased from 70 to 77 

years and is projected to increase to 80 by 2040.



As a result of these trends, the median age of the U.S. population, 

like that of other high-income nations, is projected to steadily 

increase in the coming decades, but it will still be lower than that of 

most high-income nations. Specifically, the median age of the U.S. 

population in 2030 is expected to be comparable to the current median 

ages in some high-income nations. For example, the median age of the 

U.S. population rose from 30 to 36 years from 1980 to 2000 and is 

projected to increase to 40 in 2030 (see fig. 5). In contrast, the 

median age of the populations of high-income countries was 38 years in 

2000 and is projected to rise to 45 in 2030. Germany, Italy, Japan, and 

Sweden have the current and projected oldest populations with median 

ages ranging from 40 to 41 years in 

2000 and projected increases to 51 to 54 years in 2050.



Two factors will slow the trend toward an older population in the 

United States compared with most other OECD nations: fertility and 

immigration rates. Although fertility rates in high-income nations have 

declined overall since 1980, during the same time they have increased 

from 1.8 to 2.0 in the United States. The United States also has an 

immigration rate more than four times as high as Sweden and Japan, 

almost three times as high as the United Kingdom, and higher than that 

of most high-income nations.[Footnote 25]



Figure 5: Median Age of the Population in High-Income Nations, 1980 to 

2050:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]



The consequences of these demographic trends are most evident in the 

elderly dependency ratio. In most high-income nations, this ratio has 

been rising throughout the last 50 years and is projected to grow at a 

faster rate in the next half century (see fig. 6). The ratio in the 

United States is relatively low compared with other high-income 

nations. For every 

100 people of working age (15 to 59) in the United States, 

approximately 19 people were in or nearing retirement age (60 or above) 

in 

2000 compared with a ratio of 22 for the aggregate of 23 nations the 

World Bank has designated as high-income. This difference is projected 

to grow. By 2050, this ratio for other high-income countries is 

projected to be 47 in comparison with 35 for the United States. Even 

though the United States ratio will be smaller than that of other high-

income nations in 2050, it represents an increase of over 75 percent 

from the 2000 ratio.



Figure 6: Elderly Dependency Ratio in High-Income Nations, 1950 to 

2050:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]



Key Elements of Reforms in Other Nations Expected to Increase Labor 

Force Participation of Older Workers:



The recently enacted retirement policy reforms in Japan, Sweden, and 

the United Kingdom are expected to lead to higher labor force 

participation of older workers. Reforms adjusting benefits in the 

national pension systems of each of these nations provide incentives 

for older workers to extend their working lives. National and employer-

provided pension reforms that introduce defined contribution features 

that do not link benefits to a specific age are also expected to 

encourage greater labor force participation of older workers. Other 

reforms that seek to limit the use of disability benefits as a route to 

early retirement will also influence the older worker labor force 

participation. Acknowledging that improving the employment 

opportunities of older workers is an important consideration, each of 

these nations is studying or has enacted reforms that address the 

issues of older worker’s employment more generally. Such reforms 

include loosening or eliminating mandatory retirement age standards, 

encouraging the elimination of age discrimination in employment, 

improving older worker training, providing employment earnings 

incentives, and exploring quality-of-work life issues such as the 

flexibility of work arrangements.



Benefit Adjustments to National Pension Systems May Increase Labor 

Force Participation of Older Workers:



Reforms in the United Kingdom, Japan, and Sweden that increase the age 

at which workers are eligible for benefits or allow flexibility in when 

and how pension benefits can be taken are some of the policy changes 

that may encourage older workers to stay in the workforce. The United 

Kingdom will phase in an increase in the age at which women become 

eligible for national pension benefits, so that, beginning in 2020, men 

and women will no longer be able to draw benefits before age 

65.[Footnote 26] Japan has also enacted reforms that will gradually 

increase the full eligibility age for its earnings-based national 

pension system. In Japan, by 2025 for men and 2030 for women, the 

earliest age when this pension can be claimed will have risen from 60 

to 65. Rather than increasing the age for benefit eligibility, pension 

reforms in Sweden allow older workers to take a full or partial 

national pension (i.e., one-fourth, one-half, or three-fourths of a 

full pension) at age 61 or later with no upper age limit and continue 

working.[Footnote 27] This flexibility may make it easier to retire 

gradually with a mix of pension benefits and earnings.



Additional pension reforms that change benefit calculations so they 

reward continued work or discourage early retirement may also promote 

continued labor force participation by older workers. Sweden changed 

its benefit calculation to reward those who work longer. Under the new 

pension system in Sweden,[Footnote 28] pensions are based on lifetime 

earnings, instead of the highest 15 out of 30 years of earnings as they 

were under the old system. The United Kingdom adjusted its benefit 

calculation formula to increase the reward for those who defer drawing 

benefits from the national pension system. For example, by 2010, 

individuals who defer drawing their pension benefits will receive 

benefits that are 10.4 percent, rather than 7.5 percent, larger for 

each year deferred.[Footnote 29] In Japan, reforms have changed how 

pensions are calculated, reducing the level of benefits for future 

retirees through lower accrual rates. The expected effect of these 

changes is a 20-percent reduction in lifetime benefits by 

2020, thereby making early retirement less affordable.



Finally, reforms in Sweden and the United Kingdom, in changing how 

pension benefits are indexed, may discourage early retirement. The new 

pension system in Sweden indexes pension benefits to life 

expectancy.[Footnote 30] With increasing life expectancy, different 

generations of individuals with similar work and earnings histories 

will have to work longer to maintain a comparable standard of living in 

retirement. This benefit adjustment provides incentives for increased 

labor force participation by requiring individuals to bear the cost of 

increased life expectancy, either through additional work or lower 

benefits. The United Kingdom also revised the index it used to adjust 

benefits in the portion of its pension that provides flat-rate 

benefits. Prior to the reform, the United Kingdom adjusted benefits 

using either the higher of increases in average prices or average wages 

as an index. Now the United Kingdom uses only average price 

increases.[Footnote 31] Since prices tend to increase more slowly than 

wages, this reform has effectively reduced benefits relative to 

earnings.[Footnote 32]



To Increase Work Incentives for Older Workers, National and Employer-

Provided Pension Reforms Moved Systems Towards Defined Contribution 

Features While Other Reforms Addressed Disability Insurance:



Each of the nations we studied implemented reforms that included 

defined contribution features in their national and employer-provided 

pension systems, although this shift was more pronounced in Sweden and 

the United Kingdom than in Japan. Defined contribution pensions are 

more retirement age neutral than traditional defined benefit pension 

plans. As part of its recent national pension reform, Sweden instituted 

a pay-as-you-go pension system with defined contribution features, 

including among other things a fixed contribution rate and notional 

individual accounts (the “notional defined contribution 

pension”).[Footnote 33] The new Swedish pension system also includes a 

smaller, funded defined contribution plan with an account for each 

individual worker (the premium pension). Reforms introduced in the 

United Kingdom in 1988 and 2001 permitted individuals to opt out of 

part of the national pension plan by participating either in employer-

sponsored defined contribution plans or defined contribution individual 

pension plans called “personal pensions.”[Footnote 34] To participate 

in the individual plans, workers obtain an account from a financial 

institution and make contributions into their account or are provided 

access to a pension by their employer.[Footnote 35] Japan implemented 

legislation permitting employer-provided and personal defined 

contribution pension plans in 2002.[Footnote 36]



In Sweden and the United Kingdom, the inclusion of defined contribution 

features in the national pension system has prompted complementary 

changes among the employer-provided pensions. In Sweden, three of the 

four major employer-provided pension plans converted from defined 

benefit plans to pure defined contribution plans or plans with a mix of 

both features following the national pension reform.[Footnote 37] In 

the United Kingdom, many employers have closed their defined benefit 

plans to new workers and replaced them with defined contribution plans. 

For Japan, where defined contribution pensions were only recently 

introduced, there is currently little data on the number of individual 

or employer-provided plans being formed or on the degree to which 

employers are substituting defined contribution plans for existing 

defined benefit plans.



The inclusion of defined contribution features in national and 

employer-provided pension systems is expected to encourage greater 

labor force participation of older workers. Because workers will have a 

greater responsibility for ensuring retirement through contributions 

and the returns they can earn on them, it will be in their best 

interest to make contributions for as long as they can. In addition, 

because defined contribution plans often have greater portability than 

defined benefit plans, older workers may have greater ability to shift 

to jobs that suit their leisure and health needs rather than 

retiring.[Footnote 38]



Both Sweden and the United Kingdom, where disability insurance has 

traditionally been an avenue to early withdrawal from the labor force, 

have introduced reforms in recent years that will tighten eligibility 

of disability benefits.[Footnote 39] In efforts to reduce the amount of 

early retirement financed through disability pensions, throughout the 

last decade Sweden has implemented successive reforms to tighten the 

eligibility requirements for disability insurance. This has included 

eliminating the ability of older workers to take a disability pension 

solely on the basis of long-term unemployment or a combination of 

unemployment and medical reasons. Medical reasons now provide the only 

valid criteria for granting a disability pension in Sweden. As part of 

its efforts, the United Kingdom, since the mid-1990s has tightened 

eligibility requirements, reduced paid benefits, and provided more 

support for returning to the workforce after an absence. For example, 

the government now reviews claims of incapacity to work every 3 years 

compared to the previous policy of not reviewing claims after the 

initial application, reduces or offsets disability benefits if the 

recipient also receives an employer-provided pension over a certain 

minimum level, provides services such as job search assistance to the 

disabled as a way to enable their return to work, and will test a 

policy allowing recipients to keep a portion of their wages if they 

return to work.[Footnote 40]



Labor Market Policies May Reduce Barriers to Work at Older Ages:



Each nation we studied has enacted, or is considering, policies that 

address barriers to older workers’ continued employment such as 

mandatory retirement and age discrimination. In conjunction with its 

national pension reform, Sweden has already passed legislation giving 

employees the right to remain in employment until the age of 

67, prohibiting the widespread practice of collective bargaining 

agreements prescribing mandatory retirement at age 65.[Footnote 41] As 

members of the European Union, both Sweden and the United Kingdom must 

legislatively prohibit employment discrimination based on age by 2006. 

It is unknown how the European Union requirement will affect mandatory 

retirement ages in specific industries or occupations in the United 

Kingdom.



In the absence of legislation, both the United Kingdom and Japan have 

encouraged employers to voluntarily end age discrimination. The United 

Kingdom, for example, has publicized the benefits of an age-diverse 

workforce, and issued best practices for eliminating age 

discrimination. Like the United Kingdom, Japan has also encouraged 

firms to voluntarily modify employment practices and retirement 

policies. The government has programs that subsidize the wages of 

workers who take jobs at reduced pay after mandatory retirement and 

subsidizes companies that modify their employment practices to 

accommodate older workers.



Each of the nations we studied has also made some efforts to provide 

older workers with access to training, job search assistance, and 

workplace flexibility. In the United Kingdom, for example, one 

government program provides job search assistance for people age 50 and 

older when they have been out of work 6 months or longer and also 

offers training opportunities and a wage enhancement.[Footnote 42] As 

part of its efforts, Japan has employment job assistance centers 

(called “Silver Human Resource Centers”) that provide older workers 

temporary jobs or volunteer opportunities.[Footnote 43] The Japanese 

government has also promoted a program to match older workers with 

suitable employers. In Sweden, efforts include the creation of a 

commission to explore policies to promote increased flexibility in 

working arrangements, such as granting older people a legal right to 

work part-time, and adjusting the public financing of education to 

promote skill development among older workers.



Experiences of Other Nations Suggest That the Nature of Reforms Plays a 

Key Role in Increasing Labor Force Participation of Older Workers:



The experiences of other nations suggest that the scope and 

comprehensiveness of reforms, the transparency and availability of 

information, and the strength of the economy play important roles in 

encouraging labor force participation by older workers. According to 

government officials in Japan, Sweden, and the United Kingdom, reforms 

have a better chance of succeeding if they are comprehensive and 

complementary. In addition, they said that education and transparent 

information is important for helping workers understand what the 

reforms will mean for their retirement income. Officials also agreed 

that a strong economy was important for success.



Officials from each of the nations we studied said that the success of 

national pension reform, including those elements that influence older 

workers’ labor force participation, depends, in part, on the scope and 

purpose of the reforms. Officials from all three nations noted that 

reforms are most successful when they are comprehensive in scope. Both 

Sweden and the United Kingdom, for example, in reforming their pension 

systems also made changes to both their disability insurance programs 

and labor market policies. Some officials also stressed that reforms 

should be designed so that the intent of a particular reform is not 

thwarted by countervailing policies in other areas. For example, 

Swedish pension experts and other officials have acknowledged that the 

continued presence of mandatory retirement ages in collective 

bargaining agreements and labor regulations can work at cross-purposes 

with features in the new national pension system that now relate 

benefit levels to retiree life expectancy and that essentially have no 

upper retirement age. They noted that to increase the effectiveness of 

the work incentives in their national pension reforms, these 

impediments will have to be resolved, as well as the need to establish 

complementary reform policies that foster alternative work arrangements 

and quality of work-life issues generally. Other nations also 

acknowledged the importance of complementary reforms. Japan has 

supplemented its national pension reforms with wage subsidies to 

encourage older employees to continue to work. Japan and the U.K. also 

support their national pension reforms by committing additional 

resources to organizations and services that provide job search 

assistance to older workers.



Officials in each nation that we studied emphasized that access to 

information and public education about how the reforms will affect 

retirement income would also be needed if the reforms were to have 

their intended effect. There is concern in these nations that many 

workers are currently unaware of the implications of the reforms. For 

example, surveys conducted by the Swedish government and advocates for 

senior citizens indicate that many individuals do not yet have a 

detailed understanding of the new pension system. U.K. government 

officials expressed concern that their citizens could have similar 

difficulties understanding the implemented reforms. To help their 

citizens understand that they may need to work longer or save more in 

order to ensure an adequate retirement income, each of the nations we 

studied has taken steps to educate workers. In Sweden, the government 

has launched several large information campaigns since the new pension 

system’s implementation. In addition, participants receive annual 

statements of their account balances in both the notional defined 

contribution (NDC) and premium pensions. To help educate its workers, 

the U.K. government has created a pension forecast tool that will 

present workers with estimates of pension income from both government 

and nongovernment sources. In Japan, because defined contribution 

pensions are very new and offer both advantages and disadvantages to 

participants, employers are required to provide information to 

employees about defined contribution plan features and management.



In addition to the importance of information and education, government 

officials and pension experts agreed that a strong national economy is 

necessary for the success of pension and labor market reforms that may 

contribute to higher labor force participation by older workers. A 

strong economy eases the implementation of pension reform by offering 

increased employment opportunities for older workers. High unemployment 

and low economic growth will limit older workers’ ability to remain 

employed, forcing them into complete retirement. Experts we spoke with 

believe that the low growth of the Japanese economy during the last 

decade has been a factor limiting the scope of pension and labor market 

reform, for example, in the area of mandatory retirement ages. Fiscal 

constraints also preclude more fundamental pension reform of system 

financing and structure. In contrast, the currently strong U.K. economy 

acts as an incentive for employers to retain their older workers and 

there will likely be an increased need for older workers in the long 

term, particularly as the workforce ages between now and 2020. The 

current tight labor market also makes it easier for job search 

assistance programs to find jobs for clients.



Concluding Observations:



In many nations, despite their numerous differences, increasing the 

labor force participation of older workers is an element of the 

policies chosen to reform national pension systems. Officials from each 

of the three nations we studied emphasized this issue should be 

considered in their own nation’s reform efforts. Encouraging workers to 

stay in the labor force longer can help alleviate the fiscal and 

budgetary stress induced by rising national pension expenditures and 

can potentially enhance economic growth. In those nations where 

national pension reform has included benefit reductions, working longer 

can also enable older persons to avoid serious reductions in their 

standard of living in retirement.



An important result from the experience of other nations is that to 

effectively foster greater labor force participation among older 

workers, individual reform components should be comprehensive in design 

so that employment incentives operate in a mutually reinforcing manner. 

Thus, in the nations we studied, changes in the national pension system 

were often matched by corresponding complementary initiatives affecting 

employer-provided pensions and the operation of the national labor 

market. Officials from each of the three nations we studied also 

identified other critical labor market policies that needed to be 

harmonized with these changes, particularly in the area of employment 

age discrimination and regarding mandatory retirement ages. Such 

comprehensive reforms can face formidable challenges to their design 

and implementation. In Sweden, for example, where prospects may be more 

favorable because the national pension system accounts for a large 

proportion of retirement income, comprehensive reform remains a work in 

progress with continuing discussion and debate. Nevertheless, the 

returns from a comprehensive approach could far outweigh the risks of 

failure.



The reform policies chosen by other nations should be evaluated within 

the context of their societies and institutions, however. For example, 

benefit payments from the national pension system in Sweden currently 

replaces a much larger percentage of pre-retirement income than in the 

United States. Therefore, benefit reductions in these nations will have 

significantly different effects on retirement income than similar 

actions taken in the United States. In addition, reforms that more 

closely link benefits to life expectancy, such as those implemented in 

Sweden could have significantly different distributional effects in the 

United States. For example, American subpopulations with lower average 

life expectancies, such as African Americans, would be more adversely 

affected by this policy change since they would collect benefits for 

shorter time periods relative to other racial groups. African American 

men have shorter life expectancies at birth and at age 65 compared to 

males of other ethnicities.



Finally, the focus on extending the labor force participation of older 

workers has also led to a reconsideration of the traditional definition 

of retirement where a person is either considered working or retired, 

to one that is more flexible or continuous in nature. The long-term 

trend of improved health and age longevity of older persons throughout 

the high-income nations now permits a range of options beyond the 

traditional career employment/out-of-the-workforce retirement 

tradeoff. Acknowledging this development, experts and officials from 

the nations we studied noted the importance of quality of work-life 

issues, including the wider use and availability of part-time 

employment and other alternative employment arrangements, and fostering 

“lifelong learning,” as other key components in a long-term strategy to 

extend the labor force participation of older workers. In some ways, 

the United States has already forged ahead in this area, through its 

prohibition of age employment discrimination, broad elimination of 

mandatory retirement ages, and through its public discussion of bridge 

employment, phased retirement, and other alternative employment 

arrangements. However, opportunities exist to do more. In recent work, 

we found that few U.S. employers have focused on making such options 

available to their older employees on any widespread basis, and 

numerous economic and regulatory obstacles remain that can discourage 

the employment of older workers.[Footnote 44] This led us to recommend 

to the Secretary of Labor that an interagency task force be established 

to develop legislative and regulatory proposals addressing the issues 

raised by the aging of the labor force. The challenge of how to extend 

the work-lives of older employees, given the new demographic realities 

of the 21st century, presents real opportunities, not only to bolster 

economic growth but to help secure retirement income adequacy for 

millions of working Americans and their families.



Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:



We provided copies of this report to the Secretary of Labor and 

Commissioner of Social Security. They provided technical comments which 

have been incorporated where appropriate.



Copies will be made available to others upon request. In addition, the 

report will be available at no charge on GAO’s Web site at http://

www.gao.gov. Please contact me at (202) 512-7215, Charles Jeszeck:



at (202) 512-7036, or Jeff Petersen at (415) 904-2175, if you have any 

questions about this report. Other major contributors to this report 

are listed in appendix V.



Sincerely yours,



Signed by Barbara D. Bovbjerg:



Barbara D. Bovbjerg

Director, Education, Workforce

 and Income Security Issues:



[End of section]



Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:



Analyzed Statistical Data:



To determine how the United States fares internationally regarding 

current and projected trends in key demographic and labor force 

characteristics, we compiled and analyzed data[Footnote 45] from the 

United States and seven other high-income Organisation for Economic 

Cooperation and Development (OECD) nations.[Footnote 46] In conducting 

this comparison, we examined the fertility rate, median age of the 

population, life expectancy at birth, old-age dependency ratio, 

population by sex and age group, labor force participation rate by sex 

and age group, and the unemployment rate by sex and age group for each 

of the eight nations. We also compared the United States to an 

aggregate for these characteristics that we constructed for a broader 

group of 23 OECD nations.[Footnote 47]



Reviewed Literature and Conducted Interviews with Experts:



In order to identify the dynamics of labor force participation rates of 

older workers, particularly with regard to the key incentives that 

influence work/retirement decisions, and to identify those nations that 

might be most appropriate to illustrate the role of extending the labor 

force participation in national pension system reform, we reviewed 

literature and interviewed experts. We conducted an extensive review of 

the international retirement literature, literature on the impact of 

aging societies, and previous analyses of conditions in other 

countries. Our review included research from organizations such as the 

OECD, International Labour Organization (ILO), the Center for Strategic 

and International Studies (CSIS), and the World Bank, as well as 

government agencies such as Japan’s Ministry of Health, Labor, and 

Welfare; Sweden’s Ministry of Industry, Employment and Communications; 

and the United Kingdom’s Department for Work and Pensions. We also 

consulted with experts from many of these organizations, including the 

CSIS, the OECD, the World Bank, as well as the U.S. Departments of 

Labor and the Treasury, and the U.S. Social Security Administration. In 

addition, we conferred with individual experts affiliated with major 

retirement research institutes at universities or other research 

institutes such as the National Bureau of Economic Research, the Urban 

Institute, and the Brookings Institute both for background information 

on national pension policy as well as their recommendations on which 

countries to use as case studies.



On the basis of these interviews and our research review, we selected 

three nations for intensive study that had high rates of labor force 

participation for older workers and had enacted pension reforms within 

the last decade: Japan, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. We chose Japan 

for in-depth study for its extremely high labor force participation 

rates of older workers, because it already has a large aged population 

that will continue to grow significantly in the near future, and 

because it has taken steps over the last decade to address the 

consequences of an aged society through the reform of its pension 

system and labor market policies. We selected Sweden for its high rates 

of labor force participation of older workers, substantive reform to 

the national pension system, as well as its tradition of extensive 

labor market and social welfare policies. We selected the United 

Kingdom for its national and employer-provided pension reforms that 

reversed a previous trend of rising national pension expenditures (as a 

percent of gross domestic product) and for its active labor market 

policies regarding older workers.[Footnote 48]



Conducted Site Visits in Three Foreign Countries:



We performed a focused examination of these three nations’ pension 

systems and labor market policies through site visits to each country. 

During our on-site study of each nation, we met with key government 

officials concerning pension and labor market policy, representatives 

from employer organizations and labor unions, advocacy groups, and 

well-known scholars whose research has direct relevance to 

understanding pension systems and older worker behaviors. In addition 

to speaking with us, many interviewees provided relevant written 

materials and statistics for our use.



[End of section]



Appendix II: Japan:



Japanese Pensions and Labor Market Policies:



Old-Age and Disability Pensions:



Retirement income for the majority of Japanese is mainly derived from 

the national pension system. Income from work constitutes the next 

largest share of retiree’s income. Employer-provided pensions, or the 

earnings derived from lump-sum retirement benefits, are a small portion 

of this income. Disability pensions are used by a very small percentage 

of the working age population.



National Old-Age Pension System:



The Japanese national old-age pension system consists of two tiers, 

both of which are financed on a pay-as-you-go basis. The first is the 

Old-Age Basic Pension, which covers all workers and their dependents. 

The premium for the basic pension is paid by the self-employed directly 

and by employees through their employers. The second tier is the Old-

Age Employees Pension that covers salaried workers and their 

dependents, about 70 percent of the workforce. The premium for the 

employee’s pension is paid equally by the employee and employer.



Old-Age Basic Pension:



This is a relatively small pension financed primarily by a fixed 

premium paid either directly if self-employed or through one’s 

employer. One-third of the financing comes from general revenues. 

Current premiums are about $111 per month.[Footnote 49] Premiums are 

projected to almost double by 2020. Benefit amounts are determined 

based on the number of months of contributions, with 25 years of 

contributions required for full eligibility. The average monthly 

benefit in 2001 was about $417. Full pensions begin at age 65 and are 

not offset by other income. Pensions may be received as early as age 60 

at a reduced rate.



Old-Age Employees Pension:



This is an earnings-based pension financed by premiums paid equally by 

the employer and employee. The total premium rate is currently 17.35 

percent of payroll and is projected to rise to 27.35 percent by 2020. 

Benefits are calculated based on the year of birth, the number of 

months in the system and average monthly earnings. There are two major 

components of the employees pension. The first is the flat rate 

portion, which is based on the year of birth multiplied by the number 

of months of contributions. The second component is calculated using 

earnings and months of contributions. The growth rate of benefits for 

each additional year of work for this portion is determined by year of 

birth. The average monthly employees pension was about $1,467 in 2001. 

Full pensions can currently be received from age 61; eligibility ages 

are scheduled to gradually rise to age 65 by 2030. Benefits are reduced 

until age 70 if earnings while receiving this pension exceed a certain 

level.



Employer-Provided Pensions:



Employer-provided pensions are primarily defined benefit in nature and 

may be received as (a) lump sums, (b) annuities, or (c) a combination 

of the two. The smaller the company, the more likely it is to use the 

lump-sum option. Benefits are available at mandatory retirement, 

usually age 60. About 90 percent of companies offer some type of 

retirement benefit, with about one-third of full-time employees 

receiving benefits through employee pension funds (EPF) and nearly 

the same level through what are known as tax-qualified pension plans 

(TQPP).[Footnote 50] In 2001, two laws were enacted that affect 

employer-provided pensions. The first, the Defined Benefits Pension 

Law will impact EPF and TQPP. The second, the Defined Contribution 

Pension Plan Law will allow the creation of new pension plans for 

employees and individuals.



EPF are responsible not only for the occupational pension, but also a 

carve-out or “substitution” portion of the national old-age employees 

pension. EPF offer the remuneration portion of the old age employees’ 

pension and provide added benefits. According to the Pension Fund 

Association these benefits should be 30 percent or more of the 

substitution portion of the employees’ pension. About 43 percent of 

employees in EPF take their benefits in the form of a lump-sum payment.



TQPP participants receive pension benefits that are contracted between 

companies and financial institutions like banks or life insurance 

companies. This arrangement is more likely to be used by smaller 

companies, and benefits are likely to take the form of lump-sum 

payments or fixed term annuities. The Defined Benefits Pension Law 

requires that no new TQPP be created and all existing TQPP be 

transferred into new contract-or fund-type pension arrangements.



New defined contribution pensions were recently introduced in Japan for 

corporations and individuals. Contributions are managed by the 

beneficiaries themselves, and pension benefits are paid as old-age 

benefits, disability benefits, or lump-sum death benefits.



Disability Insurance Pensions:



Disability insurance pensions are relatively rare in Japan. Like the 

two-tier Old-Age Pension System, there are two tiers of disability 

pension. Slightly more than 1 percent of the Japanese population 

receives one of these pensions. The Disability Basic Pension has 

benefits similar to that of the Old-Age Basic Pension with additional 

benefits for those with dependent children. Approximately one million 

disabled individuals aged 20-64 receive this pension. The Disability 

Employees Pension benefits, like the Old-Age Employees’ Pension 

benefits, are based on earnings and months of contributions with 

additional benefits when a spouse is present. Less than 200,000 

disabled employees aged 20-64 received this pension in 2001.



Reforms over the Past Decade:



Concern about the balance between benefits, retirement ages, and 

contribution levels in the old-age pension system have been growing 

over the last two decades. Proposals to raise the normal retirement age 

first surfaced in 1980 and were finally agreed to for the flat-rate 

portion of the employees’ old age pension in 1994 and the earnings-

based portion in 1999. These eligibility age increases will be phased 

in over several decades. The pension system undergoes actuarial 

reevaluation at least every 5 years to balance premiums and benefits 

with existing socioeconomic conditions.



The Reform Process:



The Japanese have used Pension Councils coordinated by the Ministry of 

Health and Welfare[Footnote 51] to facilitate pension reforms. Pension 

Councils are composed of representatives of employers’ groups and labor 

unions, as well as academic researchers and government officials. While 

the Ministry of Health and Welfare undertook the role of gathering and 

supplying information, employer organizations and labor unions were 

able to participate in the debate by means of participation in the 

Pension Council as official members and by publicizing their views 

concerning pension reform through editorials.



The changes that grew out of the Pension Councils can be summarized as 

follows:



Eligibility Ages:



The normal retirement age for the flat-rate portion of employee pension 

will rise to 65 for men in 2013 and 2018 for women. Eligibility ages 

for the earnings-based portion of the employee pension will rise to 65 

in 2025 for men and 2030 for women.



Contributions:



The premiums for the basic (fixed) and employees’ (earnings-based) 

systems are revised at least every 5 years based on the projected 

health of the systems. Current premiums on the earnings-related pension 

total 17.35 percent of payroll. Both premium rates are expected to grow 

in the future. The base of earnings covered by premiums to the employee 

pension was expanded to include income from bonuses, but the total 

percentage of earnings that will be needed to support the system has 

been reduced.



Calculated Benefits:



Employee pension benefit levels for those born prior to April 1, 1941, 

are higher than for those born after that date. This is true for both 

the flat-rate and the earnings-related portions of the pension. Pension 

benefit levels were reduced by about 5 percent in 2000. It has been 

estimated that lifetime employee pension benefits will be reduced by 

about 20 percent by 2020.



Employer-Provided Pension Reforms:



Outside of the Pension Council process, changes were made to employer-

provided pensions through the passage of the Defined Benefits Pension 

Law and the Defined Contribution Pension Plan Law.



Enactment of the new Defined Benefits Corporate Pension Law requires 

that existing TQPP be abolished by 2012 and their funds must transfer 

either to the EPF or to new contract or fund-type corporate pensions. 

The primary purpose is to improve protection of beneficiaries’ 

pensions.



The new Defined Contribution Pension Plan Law was designed to help 

those unable to participate in a defined benefit pension system through 

the creation of corporate and private defined contribution pensions. 

The target group for this pension is the self-employed and employees of 

small companies. Portability of pension benefits was also a factor in 

the creation of the Defined contribution Pension Plan Law.



Labor Market Policies:



The Japanese labor market has a number of features and practices that 

affect the labor force participation of older workers. These practices 

may enhance labor force participation up to a certain age but decrease 

it after that point.



Lifetime Employment:



During the period of high economic growth in the 1960s, companies 

instituted long-term or lifetime employment policies that effectively 

guaranteed employment until a worker reached mandatory retirement age. 

These policies offered companies a way to ensure that their investment 

in training achieved a positive return and provided workers job 

security. This policy is limited in that it applies only to full-time 

workers who are predominantly men.



The Seniority System:



Promotions and wages are highly related to seniority in Japanese 

companies. Under such a system, wages rise as longevity with a firm 

increases. This is in part to reflect the greater knowledge and 

experience gained with greater tenure, but also to reflect the rise in 

cost of living as employees aged. Typically, the wage of a male 

employee rises until about age 50-55, after which it falls sharply. For 

many workers at large companies wages are 30-50 percent lower at age 65 

than at age 55. This reduction makes older workers more attractive to 

employers by making them cost competitive with younger workers.



Employee Training:



Training in Japanese companies usually takes the form of on-the-job 

training. The training is usually highly company-specific and is 

closely related to the seniority system. Training opportunities 

decrease once an employee reaches a high level of seniority.



Age Discrimination and Mandatory Retirement:



There is no law in Japan that prohibits discrimination on the basis of 

age. However, recent legislation encourages employers to voluntarily 

not discriminate against older workers in the hiring process. Japanese 

law permits mandatory retirement, but the mandatory retirement age can 

be set no lower than age 60.



Recent Initiatives Directed at Older Workers:



The Japanese government has enacted some initiatives to encourage the 

employment of older workers. Rather than legislate an increase in the 

mandatory retirement age in the current weak economy, the government 

has urged companies to extend the employment of older workers 

voluntarily and to offer some employment services and grants that are 

expressly targeted toward older workers.



The policies for accomplishing this are either employment extension 

programs whereby workers who have retired are rehired or the company 

may increase its mandatory retirement age. To date, the preferred 

course of employers has been to offer reemployment or extended 

employment where such action is beneficial to the company. Companies 

are provided subsidies--called Promotion Grants to Secure Continued 

Employment--for this purpose.



Japanese officials advised us that there are no job training programs 

geared specifically toward older workers. However, the Silver Human 

Resource Centers[Footnote 52] offer skills training and job-matching 

services are offered. These centers also provide seniors with temporary 

or short-term community-related jobs. Other programs provide grants to 

employers to develop the skills of the middle-aged and older workers to 

improve their employability. There are also employment programs that 

focus on providing information to employers on the benefits older 

workers offer and how they can be accommodated.



Through the unemployment insurance system, subsidies are available 

directly to employees 60 to 64 years old who are working full-time and 

earning less than 85 percent of their former wage. This subsidy pays up 

to 25 percent of the employees’ wage after age 60 until age 65. 

Utilization of this subsidy is low, however, due to the requirements 

placed on participation. For example, recipients must be working full-

time and must be nominated by their employer. In addition, 

beneficiaries must have been paying into the unemployment insurance 

system for at least 5 years and the benefit period is reduced if they 

received unemployment payments following mandatory retirement. This 

program will become less generous and participation requirements will 

become more stringent in the future.



We were advised that participation in these programs, while small, is 

expected to grow as the retirement eligibility ages of the national 

pension system increases.



[End of section]



Appendix III: Sweden:



Swedish Pensions and Labor Market Policies:



Old-Age and Disability Pensions:



Retirement income for the majority of Swedes is mainly derived from the 

public national pension system. Employer-provided pensions, on average, 

account for roughly 20 percent of total pension entitlements. These 

pensions, however, are relatively more important to higher income 

individuals (with incomes above the ceiling in the national old age 

pension).[Footnote 53] Private (individual) pensions account for an 

even smaller amount, but have increased in importance over the last 

decade. Disability pensions have also been an important source of 

income for many who leave the labor force prior to becoming eligible 

for an old-age pension.



The major components of the Swedish old age and disability pension 

systems are undergoing important structural changes. With legislation 

passed in 1998, Sweden began implementing a fundamental reform of its 

national old-age pension system.[Footnote 54] In addition, there have 

been changes to the structure of employer-provided pensions 

complementing the national pension reform. Changes in the eligibility 

criteria and administrative structure of disability pensions have also 

accompanied old-age pension reform.



National Old-Age Pension System--Old System:



The old national pension system was a pay-as-you-go defined benefit 

plan, combining a flat rate universal benefit (the “basic pension”) 

with an earnings-related supplement (the “ATP”). The basic pension, 

introduced in 1913, was the first compulsory old age pension in the 

world to cover all citizens regardless of occupation. This flat rate 

pension was paid in full to everyone with at least 40 years of 

residence in Sweden between the ages 16 and 65, or with 30 years of 

work. ATP was introduced in 1960. Under ATP, a full earnings-related 

benefit could be obtained with 30 years of covered earnings at age 65, 

based on the average of the best 15 years. The normal (or statutory) 

eligibility age was 65 years for both the basic pension and the ATP, 

but both pensions could be drawn from the age of 

61 (60 prior to 1998) with a life-long reduction or postponed to the 

age of 70 with a life-long increase.



The national pension reform was the result of discussions that began in 

the 1980s in response to concerns about demographic trends and 

accelerated in the early 1990s in response to a serious economic crisis 

and a change in the government.[Footnote 55] The old national pension 

system was seen to be unfair in that it favored those who had short 

working careers or variable earnings. In addition, the old system faced 

severe problems with financial sustainability and was expected to 

require large increases in contribution rates in the future.



National Old-Age Pension System-New System:



The new national old-age pension system consists of an earnings-related 

pension and a minimum guaranteed pension.



Earnings-Related Pension:



The new earnings-related pension is a defined contribution scheme with 

two components: a pay-as-you-go “notional defined contribution” plan 

and a fully funded financial defined contribution plan (the “premium 

pension”). The total contribution rate for both plans is 18.5 percent 

of earnings, paid by both employers and employees.[Footnote 56] Unlike 

the old system, the final pension in both plans is based on lifetime 

earnings. In addition, there is no normal eligibility age in either 

plan. Benefits may be drawn, in full or in part (i.e., one-fourth, one-

half, or three-fourths of a full pension) at age 61 or later with no 

upper age limit. Earnings may be combined with a full or partial 

pension and will continue to generate pension contributions. In both 

plans, individuals receive pension rights from earnings as well as 

income replacement transfers (i.e., disability and sickness benefits) 

and special credits (i.e., for time spent in child rearing, university 

studies, or compulsory military service). Pension credits from income 

replacement transfers and special credits are funded by general 

revenues.



Notional Defined Contribution Pension:



The notional defined contribution (NDC) plan is the larger of the two 

earnings-related pensions, accounting for 86 percent of total 

contributions. The NDC plan is financed according to pay-as-you-go 

principles, but the system also includes pension reserve or “buffer” 

funds. The contribution rate for the NDC plan is 16 percent, with 

contributions credited to individual “notional” accounts.[Footnote 57] 

These accounts are notional in that pension rights (i.e., claims to 

future pension income) and not financial assets, are credited to 

them.[Footnote 58] During the accumulation period, the pension rights 

credited to the notional individual accounts are indexed by average 

wage growth. At retirement, the accumulated “notional capital” is 

converted to an annuity related to estimated life expectancy at the age 

of retirement and an assumed “norm” real rate of return (a 1.6-percent 

increase in real average wages). This means that with increasing life 

expectancy over time, other things being equal, individuals will have 

to work longer or accept lower pensions.[Footnote 59] After retirement, 

benefits are indexed by average wage growth minus the assumed growth 

norm of 1.6 percent. Thus, if real wage growth falls below the norm, 

the real value of pensions will fall (and vice versa). An automatic 

balancing mechanism places a further “brake” on the upward indexation 

of pensions and pension rights if the balance in the pension reserve or 

buffer fund falls below a certain level.



Premium Pension:



The new Swedish national pension also includes an earnings-related, 

funded defined contribution plan, the “premium pension,” in which 

contributions are made to individual financial accounts. Participation 

in the premium pension is mandatory, but the contribution rate (2.5 

percent) is low relative to that of the pay-as-you-go NDC plan. 

Individuals have a great deal of investment choice (currently about 600 

funds), and a default fund is provided for those who decline to make 

investment fund choices for their accounts. At retirement, these 

individual accounts may be converted into either fixed or variable 

annuities.



Guaranteed Pension:



In addition to the two earnings-related pensions, the new national 

pension system also includes a minimum “guaranteed” pension for those 

with no or low earnings. Unlike the universal basic pension of the old 

national pension system, the new guaranteed pension provides a means-

tested benefit. The guaranteed pension is funded separately from the 

earnings-related pension; it comes completely out of general revenues. 

Unlike the earnings-related pensions, individuals may claim benefits 

under this plan no earlier than age 65. Benefits under this plan are 

indexed to the Consumer Price Index (CPI), not to average wage growth 

as in the earnings-related NDC plan.



Employer-Provided Old-Age Pensions:



Roughly 90 percent of all workers in Sweden are covered by an employer-

provided pension plan based on collective agreements between central 

employer and union organizations. There are four different collectively 

bargained, employer-provided pension plans: two separate plans for 

workers in the private sector --one for white-collar workers and one 

for blue-collar workers and two separate plans for public sector 

employees, one for central government workers and one for municipal 

(and county) workers. Traditionally, these pensions have been defined 

benefit plans, closely linked to and supplementing the national 

pension.[Footnote 60] And, typically, benefits in these plans have been 

based on final salaries. During the 1990s, however, the plans for 

private sector blue-collar workers and municipal workers converted to 

defined contribution plans with contributions paid by the employers.

[Footnote 61] In 2003, central government workers will also have a new 

pension plan containing defined contribution features.[Footnote 62] 

White-collar workers in the private sector, however, continue to have a 

largely defined benefit plan.



Private (Individual) Old-Age Pensions:



Although private pensions remain a relatively small source of 

retirement income in Sweden, there has been an increase in individual 

retirement saving in recent years. Some analysts attribute this to the 

increased attention to retirement income associated with the pension 

reform discussion (and perhaps an increased awareness of financial 

markets associated with the introduction of the premium pension), and/

or concerns about the impact of pension reform on future pensions 

(especially among women).



Disability Pensions:



The most common way for Swedish workers to leave the labor force before 

the age of 65 has been with a disability pension. Prior to 1991, it was 

possible to be awarded a disability pension for three reasons: first, 

on medical grounds, for those aged 16-65; second, on medical and labor 

market grounds (i.e., due to long-term unemployment), for those aged 

60-65; or third, on labor market grounds only, for those aged 60-65 who 

had exhausted their unemployment benefits. Disability pensions granted 

exclusively for labor market reasons were called “58.3 pensions”: If a 

worker aged 58 years and 3 months were laid off, he or she could claim 

unemployment benefits up to age 60, and then claim a disability pension 

for labor market reasons (until claiming an old-age pension at age 

65). Eligibility requirements for disability benefits have been 

tightened in successive reforms throughout the 1990s. The granting of 

disability pensions exclusively for labor market reasons, for example, 

was discontinued in 1991, and since 1997 medical reasons are the only 

valid criteria for granting a disability pension. In addition, as part 

of the national pension reform, disability insurance was separated 

administratively from the old age pension system.



Labor Market Policies:



Active labor market programs for the unemployed play an important role 

in Sweden’s labor market policy. These programs have, for the most 

part, always been open to workers of all ages. The Activity Guarantee 

program, for example, ensures the long-run unemployed placement in job 

training and re-employment programs. One-third of the participants are 

between the ages 55 and 64. Swedish experts and officials argue, 

however, that existing labor laws, workplace practices, and attitudes 

may create barriers to continued employment among older people. They 

also argue that reducing these barriers is increasingly important in 

Sweden in light of pension reforms that encourage increased labor force 

participation. Some policy changes have already been implemented in 

Sweden to reduce these barriers, such as increasing the mandatory 

retirement age from 65 to 67 years. In other areas of concern-such a 

seniority rules, age discrimination, employment and skills training, 

quality of work life and attitudes toward older workers--possible 

policy changes are currently under discussion.



Mandatory Retirement:



Prior to the national pension reform, collective agreements in Sweden 

established a mandatory retirement age of 65. That is, seniority rules 

(see discussion below) were not applied to workers aged 65 and older, 

and employers were permitted to terminate employment at that age. In 

May 2001, the Swedish Parliament added a new compulsory rule to the 

Employment Protection Act, giving all employees the right, but not the 

obligation, to remain in employment until the age of 67.[Footnote 63] 

Collective agreements prescribing a mandatory retirement age of 65 are 

now prohibited, although agreements covering the age at which employees 

have the right to leave employment and receive a pension are still 

allowed. Existing agreements prescribing mandatory retirement at age 65 

were allowed to remain in place until they expired but no later than 

December 31, 2002.[Footnote 64]



Seniority Rules:



According to Swedish seniority rules, firms engaged in downsizing their 

work force must follow the “first-in-last-out” rule, giving priority 

for continued employment to those who have been employed the longest. 

Some analysts argue that this protection for older workers helps to 

explain the relatively high rate of employment among the 50-64 year old 

age group. It is also argued, however, that this rule may promote early 

pensioning in times of downsizing and possibly limit the mobility of 

older workers. Ways to make seniority rules more flexible, while still 

offering employment protection, are currently under discussion in the 

context of policies to encourage older workers.



Age Discrimination:



Advocates for older persons in Sweden view age discrimination as a 

serious impediment facing workers who wish to remain employed later in 

life. Sweden currently has no legislation against age discrimination in 

employment. As a member of the European Union, however, Sweden will be 

required to pass such legislation. In 2000, the European Union 

established a general framework for equal treatment in employment and 

requires all member countries to introduce legislation prohibiting 

discrimination at work on the grounds of age, sexual orientation, 

religion and belief, and disability. The directive gives member states 

until 2006 to implement the provisions on age and permits considerable 

latitude in how the directive is to be implemented in practice.



Training:



Overall, the incidence of employment and skills training is relatively 

high in Sweden, and older workers receive nearly the same amount of 

training as younger workers. Some researchers and officials, however, 

believe that the skills of older workers need to be enhanced, 

particularly those skills necessary for adapting to changing work 

environments and pursuing second careers. They have concerns that older 

workers may be disadvantaged in acquiring such skills. It is difficult, 

for example, for people over 40 years of age to acquire public loans 

for university studies. There are various proposals to address these 

problems, including the establishment of special higher education 

savings accounts to enhance the financing of higher education for 

people of all age groups.



Quality of Work Life:



Swedish researchers report that surveys of older employees in Sweden 

find many would like to work longer but would prefer different types of 

jobs and/or fewer hours of work. Thus, government officials and 

advocates for older workers see “working life” issues--such as the need 

for more flexible work time arrangements, the ability to switch to more 

appropriate types of work, and management practices that create a 

positive environment for older workers--to be critically important. 

Recommendations to provide older persons with a right to work part-

time, to revise labor laws to allow for short-term contracts for older 

workers, and to devise systems to make it easier to change job duties 

while employed are under discussion. Negative attitudes toward older 

workers are also a concern and are seen to create barriers to the 

employment of older people. Surveys find that the majority of employers 

do not want to hire older workers. This attitude is attributed to 

prejudice and misinformation and/or work rules and practices that make 

older workers more expensive. Government officials and advocates argue 

that addressing these negative attitudes must be part of any 

comprehensive policy change to promote the labor force participation of 

older people and must be undertaken in the context of broader policies 

to promote the overall well-being of older people in Sweden.



[End of section]



Appendix IV: The United Kingdom:



United Kingdom Pensions and Labor Market Policies:



Old-Age and Disability Pensions:



Retirement income in the United Kingdom is made up of both government 

and private sources. In the late 1990s, national pension benefits made 

up 38 percent of the national average wage. The government allows 

workers to substitute employer-provided pensions or individual pension 

accounts for the earnings-related portion of national pension benefits, 

and in the late 1990s, about 75 percent of workers did so. About 60 

percent of current pensioners receive benefits from an employer-

provided pension, typically defined benefit and providing them with 

two-thirds of their final salary after 40 years of service. With recent 

reforms, future pensioners are likely to have more of their retirement 

income derive from defined contribution employer-provided pensions or 

individual pension accounts. For low-income pensioners with little or 

no private pension income, the government provides a larger earnings-

related benefit, as well as means-tested benefits. Disability pensions 

have also been an important source of income for many who leave the 

labor force prior to becoming eligible for an old-age pension.



The National Old-Age Pension System:



The United Kingdom’s national pension system consists of three tiers--

the state basic pension, an earnings-related pension, and discretionary 

savings vehicles.



Basic State Pension:



The Basic State Pension provides a flat-rate benefit of £75.50 per week 

for a single pensioner (about $120 per week or about $6,200 per 

year).[Footnote 65] It is adjusted annually for price inflation. To 

qualify for the full benefit, male pensioners and female pensioners 

turning 65 after 2020 must have made 44 years of National Insurance 

Contributions. Female pensioners turning 60 before 2010 must have made 

39 years of contributions.[Footnote 66] Workers who are not paying 

contributions because they are unemployed, disabled, caring at home for 

a child or relative, on state maternity benefits, or are taking 

training courses may receive credits toward the Basic State Pension. 

Workers with less than the required number of years of contributions 

have their state basic pension reduced proportionately, but workers 

must usually have made at least 10 years of contributions to receive 

any benefits. In practice, the Basic State Pension is near universal 

for men. It is becoming universal for women since the enactment of the 

Home Responsibilities Protection Act in 1978, which allowed those 
caring 

for children and people who are sick or disabled to earn credits toward 

the Basic State Pension so long as they have made 20 years of 

contributions.



Means-Tested Benefits:



Low-income older individuals are eligible for means-tested benefits, 

one of which is the Minimum Income Guarantee (MIG). The MIG tops up 

incomes of those age 60 and over with income less than £98.15 per week 

for a single person (about $158 per week or about $8,200 per year) to 

those levels. MIG benefits are increased annually with average growth 

in wages. The MIG does have an earnings test. Each $1 of benefit is 

withdrawn for each $1 in earnings above the MIG level.



In October 2003, the government will replace the MIG with the Pension 

Credit, in part to reduce the MIG’s earnings test. With the Pension 

Credit, each $1 of income will lead to a $0.40 decrease in benefits, 

increasing the worker’s overall income by $0.60. The Pension Credit 

consists of two elements: (1) a guarantee credit which tops up the 

income of a single person to £102 per week (about $163 per week or 

about $8,500 per year) and (2) a savings credit which provides a 

benefit to those with modest savings, pension income, or earnings. The 

savings credit is designed to taper away as an individual’s income 

rises and phases out for individuals with £134.80 of income per week or 

more (about $216 per week or about $11,200 per year). The eligibility 

age for the savings credit is currently 65. The eligibility age for 

the guarantee credit is currently 60 but will rise in line with the 

increase in women’s eligibility age for national pension benefits, so 

that it will be 65 by 2020.



Aside from the MIG, other means-tested benefits include assistance with 

housing costs and local taxes. About 51 percent of U.K. households over 

age 60 are eligible for means-tested benefits, although in 2000-2001 

only 64 percent to 78 percent of eligible households claimed these 

benefits.[Footnote 67]



Earnings-Related Pension (State Second Pension):



The earnings-related pension, now called the State Second Pension, 

supplements the Basic State Pension but may be substituted by several 

types of private pensions. From its creation in 1978 until 1988, the 

earnings-related pension (then called the State Earnings Related 

Pension System) provided benefits of about 25 percent of workers’ 

average annual earnings for the best 20 years. From 1988, benefits have 

been reduced to a target of 20 percent of average lifetime earnings. In 

2000, a technical adjustment in computing benefits led to a further 

reduction. In April 2002, another reform was implemented which resulted 

in low-and moderate-income workers receiving higher benefits as a 

proportion of wages, while benefits for those with annual income above 

£24,600 (about $40,000) benefits remain about the same. In the late 

1990s, about 75 percent of covered workers substituted private pensions 

for the state earnings-related pension. These private pension plans are 

either employer-provided pensions or individual pension accounts called 

personal pensions. Personal pensions may be provided through financial 

institutions or offered by employers. Employers with five or more 

employees who do not offer an employer-sponsored pension must give 

workers access to a type of personal pension called a stakeholder 

pension. Stakeholder pensions have additional legal requirements, such 

as a maximum administrative charge of 1 percent of the pension fund’s 

value. In return for forgoing future State Second Pension benefits, 

individuals who opt out of the state earnings-related pension for 

private pensions pay lower National Insurance Contributions. Those who 

opt out for individual pension accounts pay full National Insurance 

Contributions but receive part of their contributions back as a rebate 

that is deposited into their individual account. Those who opt out of 

the State Second Pension for employer-provided pensions pay national 

insurance contributions at a reduced rate. Similar to the Basic State 

Pension, the State Second Pension allows individuals who are looking 

after a child under age 6 or an ill or disabled person to qualify for 

State Second Pension benefits.



The Discretionary Tier:



The third tier consists of additional forms of voluntary savings. 

First, individuals can choose to make additional voluntary 

contributions into their employer-sponsored pension plan. Second, 

individuals can choose to make additional contributions into their 

personal pensions or stakeholder pensions. Individuals will receive tax 

relief for these contributions up to a certain ceiling. And finally, 

individuals can choose to make contributions to a variety of other tax-

relieved instruments, such as annuities and life insurance.



Other Features of the National Old-Age Pension System:



Eligibility Age: For the basic and earnings-related pensions, benefits 

may be drawn at age 65 for men and 60 for women. In response to a 

European Union directive requiring gender equality in member countries’ 

pensions policies, women’s eligibility age will also become 65, with 

the change gradually taking place between 2010 and 2020. The U.K.’s 

national pension system does not have an early eligibility age.



Earnings Test: The U.K.’s national pension system does not have an 

earnings test, meaning that benefits are not offset by the wages earned 

by pensioners.



Deferral of Pension Benefits: If pension benefits are drawn past 

eligibility age, benefits are increased by an increment of 7.5 percent 

per year of deferral. In 2010, the increment will increase to 10.4 

percent. The government is considering pushing up implementation of the 

increase to 2006. It is also considering allowing individuals a choice 

between taking the benefit increase as a lump-sum payment or as 

increases in each benefit payment.



Funding: The Basic State Pension and State Second Pension are funded on 

a pay-as-you-go basis by National Insurance Contributions shared by 

employers and employees. General revenues may also be used to fund 

pension benefits. Employers pay 11.8 percent of earnings above a 

threshold for employees in the State Second Pension and between 

8.3 percent to 10.8 percent for employees who have opted out. Employees 

in the State Second Pension pay 10 percent of earnings above a 

threshold up to an earnings limit, while employees who have opted out 

pay 8.4 percent. From April 2003, National Insurance Contribution rates 

will increase by 1 percent for employers and employees on earnings 

above a threshold. Employees will also pay 1 percent of earnings above 

the earnings limit, and the earnings limit will be raised in line with 

inflation. National Insurance Contributions also fund other benefits, 

including disability, unemployment, and survivors’ benefits.



Sustainability: Changes to the U.K. national pension system, including 

raising women’s eligibility age, increasing Basic State Pension 

benefits in line with average price increases rather than the higher of 

increases in average prices or wages, and making survivors’ benefits 

less generous, are helping to maintain the long-term fiscal 

sustainability of the system. In 1984, the U.K. government projected 

that the National Insurance Contribution rate needed to pay for 

national pension benefit payments would be 23 percent by the 2020s. 

Currently, the contribution rate needed to pay for benefits is 

estimated to be 18.2 percent by 2020. Pension costs as a percentage of 

gross domestic product are projected to remain about 

5 percent through 2050.



Employer-Provided Old-Age Pensions:



Almost half of U.K. workers are members of either defined benefit or 

defined contribution pensions provided by their employers. Employers 

who offer pensions to their workers may pay lower National Insurance 

Contributions by having their employees forego rights to benefits from 

the state earnings-related pension. Employees in these plans also pay 

lower National Insurance Contributions.



Until 1986, employers could only use defined benefit pension plans as a 

basis for their employees to opt out of the state earnings-related 

pension, and employers could require employees to join their defined 

benefit pension plan. The Social Security Act of 1986 allowed employees 

with either defined benefit or defined contribution employer-provided 

pensions to opt out and allowed workers to choose whether to join the 

pension plan provided by their employer. Since then, the U.K. has 

experienced a movement of employer-provided pensions from defined 

benefit to defined contribution. In 2000, about 81 percent of employees 

accruing benefits in employer-provided pension plans were in defined 

benefit plans provided primarily by large employers. However, of the 

plans open to new members, about 70 percent were defined contribution. 

On average, employers and employees make lower rates of contributions 

to defined contribution plans than defined benefit plans. In 2000, 

employers contributing to employees’ defined benefit plans contributed 

11.1 percent of earnings on average, while employers contributing to 

defined contribution plans contributed 5.1 percent of earnings on 

average. Employees contributed 5.0 percent of earnings on average to 

defined benefit plans, while they contributed 3.4 percent of earnings 

on average to defined contribution plans.



Employers who opt out of the State Second Pension by offering defined 

benefit pensions are required to provide benefits that are broadly 

equal to or better than the benefits employees would receive in the 

State Second Pension. There is no such requirement for defined 

contribution pensions. Typical defined benefit pensions offer benefits 

equal to one-eightieth or one-sixtieth of final salary per year of 

membership in the plan, or half or two-thirds of final salary for 

workers who have been in the plan for 40 years. Typical ages at which 

workers may draw full pension benefits are 60 and 65. The earliest age 

at which benefits may be drawn is 50.[Footnote 68] All private sector 

defined benefit pensions are fully funded, while some public sector 

defined benefit pensions are financed on a pay-as-you-go basis.



The government has recently announced several proposals for encouraging 

employers to establish pension plans that encourage longer labor force 

participation. For example, the government plans to increase the 

earliest age when workers may begin drawing employer-provided pension 

benefits to 55 by 2010. The government has also specified some best 

practices for defined benefit employer-provided pension plans. These 

include allowing those who work past normal retirement age to continue 

earning pension rights and to receive a fair benefit increase. In 

addition, the government is encouraging employers to calculate benefits 

from the best year’s salary out of the last few years of employment so 

as not to penalize people who change positions to reduce 

responsibilities at the end of their career.



Disability Insurance:



Disability insurance in the U.K. pays a bi-weekly benefit to adults who 

cannot work. Currently, recipients age 50 and older number 

approximately 1,175,000 compared with approximately 160,000 recipients 

of unemployment insurance. During the 1970s and 1980s, the U.K. 

expanded and improved the coverage of benefits for disabled adults, 

then tightened them in accordance with the current government’s overall 

“welfare to work” strategy. Prior to 1971, those unable to work due to 

disability received means-tested benefits. In 1971-2, the Invalidity 

Benefit (IVB) was introduced. For those who had a sufficient National 

Insurance contribution history, IVB provided an age-related income to 

those who were disabled and not working. Claimant’s age and 

qualifications could be taken into account in the criteria determining 

incapacity for work. Cash benefits were not taxed and were indexed to 

earnings. Benefits generally expanded and improved during the 

1970s. However, in 1980, IVB (and all other long-term benefits) 

indexation was changed to prices rather than earnings, which ultimately 

provided recipients with smaller benefits. In 1995, IVB was replaced by 

the Incapacity Benefit (IB), at least in part because these benefits 

were perceived to be subsidizing unemployment and early retirement. The 

National Insurance contribution element for IB requires contributions 

from work within the last 2 years, rather than in any previous year. IB 

also has stricter eligibility criteria, testing if there is any work 

the claimant could perform regardless of the likelihood of obtaining 

such a job or its suitability. The assessment of capacity to work can 

be ongoing rather than a once-only assessment. IB cash benefits, unlike 

IVB, are taxable. Finally, income over £85 per week from an 

occupational or personal pension, or certain types of health insurance 

payment will reduce by 50 percent the amount of IB paid to the 

claimant.



Labor Market Policies:



The U.K. government has begun a series of reforms that are designed to 

increase employment opportunities and increase both incentives and 

abilities to take on paid work for older workers. These reforms address 

mandatory retirement and age discrimination, lack of training or 

skills, and inflexible work and retirement options.



Mandatory Retirement and Age Discrimination:



Although the U.K. currently allows employers to set mandatory 

retirement ages for their employees, there have been efforts by the 

government to encourage employers to extend employment opportunities 

for older workers voluntarily. The government continues its campaign 

begun in 1993 to promote the benefits of an age-diverse workforce to 

employers. In 1999, the government issued a voluntary Code of Practice 

on Age Diversity, which sets good practice standards for employers on 

eliminating age discrimination in their business, in hopes that 

employers would retain and hire older workers voluntarily. In 2000, the 

Cabinet Office issued a report[Footnote 69] describing the economic and 

social reasons for promoting active aging, a concept of improving 

people’s opportunity to contribute to society and to the economy in 

their later working years, and laying out a plan of action to encourage 

active aging. In response, one public employer has raised and some 

private employers have eliminated their mandatory retirement ages. For 

example, civil servants in the U.K. were subject to a mandatory 

retirement age of 60, but now the majority of employees have the option 

of staying on until age 65. Finally, the U.K. is moving toward enacting 

legislation against age discrimination in employment, which is required 

by a recent European Union Council Directive by 2006. Although the 

government has proposed abolishing mandatory retirement ages, it is not 

yet known if the legislation will address current legal provisions 

permitting mandatory retirement policies.



Employment Assistance:



The U.K. government offers several types of employment assistance for 

older workers, including assistance with job searching, training, and 

employment subsidies through the Department for Work and Pensions 

(DWP). The DWP was created after the last election with the principal 

aim of implementing the government’s welfare-to-work strategy. In 2002, 

the government units responsible, separately, for disability insurance 

and unemployment insurance were combined into the new government unit 

called Jobcentre Plus, effectively placing services for recipients of 

disability and unemployment benefits in a single office within the DWP. 

Jobcentre Plus provides services through local employment assistance 

centers where all unemployed clients go for assistance seeking jobs. 

For example, personal advisors assist clients to search for jobs.



The New Deal 50 Plus program is one government program specific to 

older people who want to work. Run through the Jobcentre Plus 

locations, it offers assistance with job searching, training, and 

through employment subsidies. This program was piloted in 1999 and went 

national in 2000. Since 1999, over 4,000 people ages 50-64 have 
received 

the training grant and over 80,000 have received the employment 
subsidy. 

Until April 2003, New Deal 50 Plus participants receive the employment 

subsidy as a cash wage supplement of up to £60 per week if their wages 

are under £15,000. In April 2003, the cash employment subsidy will 

become a tax credit for working individuals.



Quality of Work Life:



Flexible working options for older workers is acknowledged as an 

important issue by government officials, representatives of union and 

employer organizations, and advocates. Despite the interest, employer 

organizations and government officials contend that a tax rule 

prohibits the receipt of employer-provided pension benefits while 

working for that employer. The government has recently proposed changes 

to this rule.



[End of section]



Appendix V: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:



GAO Contacts:



Barbara Bovbjerg, (202) 512-7215

Charles Jeszeck, (202) 512-7036

Jeffrey Petersen, (415) 904-2175:



Acknowledgments:



Other contributors to this report include Anthony DeFrank, Anna Laitin, 

Katharine Leavitt, Janice Peterson, and Yunsian Tai.



FOOTNOTES



[1] For this report, the term “national pension system” will be used 

when referring to “universal” government programs that provide 

retirement benefits to persons in nations other than the United States. 

The term “employer-provided pension” refers to retirement benefits 

businesses make available to their employees.



[2] In this report, we define older workers as persons 50 years of age 

and older. In some cases, because of the limitations of available data, 

we analyze subgroups of older workers, for example, those 55 years of 

age and older.



[3] Besides the United States, the seven other nations highlighted are 

the remaining six of the “G-7”--Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, 

and the United Kingdom--and Sweden.



[4] Under a defined contribution plan, the retirement benefit is 

expressed as an account balance for the individual employee. This 

balance results from contributions that the employer, the worker, or 

both make, as well as from subsequent investment returns on the assets 

in the account.



[5] The baby boom generation is defined as all persons born between 

1946 and 1964.



[6] For a general discussion of these trends, see U.S. General 

Accounting Office Older Workers: Demographic Trends Pose Challenges for 

Employers and Workers, GAO-02-85 (Washington, D.C.: Nov.16, 2001).



[7] The full eligibility age (or normal retirement age) for Social 

Security benefits is being raised from 65 to 67 from 2000 to 2022. The 

reduction for taking benefits at age 62 was 20 percent when the full 

eligibility age was 65. When the age increase to 67 is fully 

implemented, the reduction will be 30 percent.



[8] P. Diamond and J. Gruber. “Social Security and Retirement in the 

United States,” Social Security and Retirement Around the World 

(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999).



[9] This calculation is based on living to average life expectancy. If 

the calculation is based specifically on race or gender, the results 

may be different since life expectancy differs by race and gender. For 

example, an African American male, who would be projected to have a 

lower life expectancy relative to females, and males of other 

ethnicities, should take benefits at the earliest possible age to 

maximize his total lifetime benefit.



[10] Employer-provided pensions outside of any mandatory or universal 

national pension system comprise what is often called the system of 

occupational pensions. We use the term employer-provided pensions when 

discussing occupational pension systems.



[11] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Pension Plans: Characteristics 

of Persons in the Labor Force without Pension Coverage, GAO/HEHS-00-131 

(Washington, D.C.: Aug. 22, 2000).



[12] For example, under a defined benefit plan with a final average pay 

formula, the retirement benefit is a percentage of the participant’s 

final years of pay multiplied by his or her length of service. Under 

defined benefit plans, contributions are co-mingled funds invested in a 

pension trust on behalf of all participants, and plan trustees have 

fiduciary responsibilities for all assets in the pension trust.



[13] An example of a defined contribution plan is the 401(k) plan, 

named for the section of the Internal Revenue Code that sets out the 

tax preferences for such plans. 



[14] The Employee Retirement and Income Security Act generally requires 

that tax-qualified plans allow participants to retire with full 

benefits at no later than age 65. Many plans allow normal retirement 

earlier than these limits.



[15] However, though they are age-neutral with regard to the benefit 

formula in comparison to defined benefit plans, defined contribution 

plans can still influence the retirement decision through their effect 

on individual wealth. The investment performance of a workers’ account 

can have a large effect on the final pension benefit. High rates of 

return on an account can lead to larger balances, permitting possible 

earlier retirement. The degree to which this can occur is also a 

function of the individual’s allocation of portfolio assets. See Are 

Older Workers Responding to the Bear Market? by Andrew D. Eschtruth and 

Jonathan Gemus, September 2002. JTF No. 5, Center for Retirement 

Research, Boston College. 



[16] Access to retiree health benefits is a factor influencing older 

workers’ retirement decisions. GAO has reported that the availability 

of employer-sponsored health insurance coverage for retirees under age 

65 declined during the 1990’s. See Retiree Health Insurance: Gaps in 

Coverage and Availability, GAO-02-178T (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 1, 

2001).



[17] This includes the prohibition of most mandatory retirement 

policies.



[18] Replacement rates from national pension systems in some other 

high-income nations are substantially higher. For example, the 

replacement rate in Sweden is approximately 55 to 65 percent.



[19] We focus on the age range of 50-59 because DI benefits are 

automatically converted to retired worker benefits at the normal 

retirement age (currently 65 and 8 months for people reaching age 62 in 

2003). New DI participation is discouraged at age 62-64 due to the 

lengthy determination process that makes many people choose to take 

Social Security retired worker benefits. 



[20] High-income nations refers to the 8 nations listed in footnote 3. 

These nations are included in the 23 nations that the World Bank has 

designated as high-income. For a complete listing of all 23 nations, 

see appendix I.



[21] In the United States, the old-age dependency ratio is typically 

measured by comparing persons over age 65 with persons 16-64. We 

presented data for persons over age 60 compared with persons age 15-59 

because ILO makes these data available in these age ranges.



[22] We present ILO data because they are the only comparable available 

data on the high-income nations. However, ILO projections differ from 

those conducted by BLS that actually project increases in the labor 

force participation for older U.S. workers between the years 2000 and 

2025. In both cases, the labor force participation for older workers in 

the United States remains comparatively higher than many, though not 

all, other high-income nations. 



[23] Possible explanations for Japan’s and Sweden’s high older worker 

labor force participation rates are both cultural and economic. Experts 

have told us that older people in Japan attach a high value to work and 

making a contribution to society. One factor that may have further 

influenced labor force participation rates of older workers in Japan is 

that Japan only instituted a national pension system in the 1960s. The 

traditionally high labor force participation rates for older workers in 

Sweden are seen to reflect the fact that until the early 1990s, Sweden 

had very low unemployment rates for all workers. In addition, Sweden 

has always had the same retirement age for men and women and includes 

older workers in re-employment programs. 



[24] Sweden has experienced the most dramatic rise in labor force 

participation among women age 50-64, with rates tripling from 25 

percent to 76 percent since 1950.



[25] The net immigration rate in the United States from 1995 to 2000 

was 4.53 persons per 1,000 residents. Source: World Population 

Prospects: The 2000 Revision, United Nations Population Division. Found 

in Nyce, Steven A. and Sylvester J. Schieber. 2001. “Our Assumptions 

About Aging and What We Are Doing About It,” draft manuscript.



[26] Means-tested benefits are available from age 60. See appendix IV. 



[27] For example, if a worker “retires” from his/her full time job at 

age 61 and continues to work part time while drawing 50 percent of his/

her national pension, these earnings will continue to add to the value 

of his or her pension account. When he or she retires completely, the 

pension will be recalculated to take into account these additional 

earnings. See appendix III.



[28] Sweden switched from a traditional pay-as-you-go defined benefit 

plan to system that combines a fully funded defined contribution plan 

and a pay-as-you-go “notional” defined contribution plan with automatic 

adjustments to preserve financial stability. The notional defined 

cotribution is the larger of the two plans, accounting for 86 percent 

of all national pension contributions. See appendix III.



[29] Experts we spoke with disagreed about the effectiveness of this 

reform in increasing older worker labor force participation. However, 

the government has considered changes to this reform. For example, it 

is considering allowing people a choice between taking the benefit 

increase as a lump-sum payment or as increases in each benefit payment. 

It is also considering pushing up the implementation of the benefit 

increase so that it will take effect in 2006 rather than 2010. This 

could increase the incentive for older worker labor force 

participation.



[30] For example, a person’s pension in the notional defined 

contribution plan is calculated by dividing their pension account (the 

value of their accumulated pension rights) by an annuity factor. 

Estimated cohort life expectancy is the key element in the 

determination of the annuity factor, which is also determined by the 

“norm” real rate of return (a 1.6-percent increase in average real 

wages) and age at retirement. A higher average life expectancy for a 

cohort will increase the size of the annuity factor for that cohort 

compared to preceding cohorts. Consequently, individuals in later 

cohorts retiring at the same age and with the same pension account as 

those in earlier cohorts will receive a lower pension. See appendix 

III.



[31] The United Kingdom government announced in December 2002 that it 

will increase flat-rate pension benefits in future years by at least 

2.5% per year, even if this is larger than the increase in average 

prices. 



[32] This change was introduced in 1980. Experts believe that the flat-

rate basic portion of the U.K.’s national pension, which currently 

amounts to about 15 percent of average male earnings, will drop to 7 

percent of average male earnings by 2050. However, means-tested 

benefits indexed to earnings growth are available to low-income 

individuals from age 60. See appendix IV.



[33] This plan is called a notional defined contribution plan because 

pension rights (i.e., claims on future pension income), not actual 

financial assets, are credited to the individual’s notional accounts. 

In the U.S. context, this component of the Swedish national pension 

could be considered analogous to “cash balance” plan, a type of defined 

benefit plan.



[34] Prior to 1988, the United Kingdom’s national pension system had 

allowed individuals to opt out of the earnings-related part of the 

national pension system for employer-provided defined benefit plans 

only. See appendix IV.



[35] Workers continue to pay contributions to the national pension 

system, but the government transfers a portion of contributions to 

individuals’ personal or stakeholder pension account to compensate them 

for foregoing earnings-related national pension benefits. See appendix 

IV.



[36] The law specifies the earliest age of withdrawal of pension funds 

from these defined contribution plans as 60 if enrolled for 10 or more 

years, or 65 if enrolled for less than 10 years. For a summary of 

Japan’s national and employer-provided pension system, see appendix II.



[37] Employer-provided pensions, which are negotiated through 

collective bargaining, cover close to 90 percent of Swedish workers. 

See appendix III.



[38] Defined contribution plans likely increased the portability of 

benefits for many United Kingdom workers previously covered by defined 

benefit plans. In Sweden, workers’ pension benefits were more portable 

under the old employer-provided pension plans than under the defined 

benefit plans in many other nations. However, some Swedish pension 

experts noted that because pension premiums are generally higher for 

older workers, and a workers’ final employer has typically been 

responsible for paying their pension benefits, it has been difficult 

for older workers to change jobs later in their careers. These experts 

argued that with the recent negotiated pension plan changes the cost 

burden on the final employer is reduced. 



[39] In contrast, statistics provided by a Japanese official indicate 

that workers have not used disability insurance as a major means of 

withdrawing early from the labor force. 



[40] The policy that will allow disability recipients to keep a portion 

of their wages if they return to work is subject to means testing and a 

1-year time limit.



[41] It should be noted that reaching an agreement on changing the 

mandatory retirement age in Sweden was difficult, and the legislation 

that implemented this change has been controversial.



[42] All clients are eligible to receive services to help them find 

employment; clients are also eligible for up to £60 per week wage 

enhancement if they meet certain criteria. See appendix IV.



[43] See appendix II.



[44] For a discussion of these and related issues, see U.S. General 

Accounting Office, Older Workers: Demographic Trends Pose Challenges 

for Employers and Workers, GAO-02-85 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 16, 2001).



[45] These data include OECD summary statistics regarding labor force 

participation among older workers, United Nations Population Division 

data on demographics, and ILO data on actual and projected labor force 

participation based on population estimates from the United Nations 

Population Division.



[46] The group of high-income nations we analyzed are Canada, France, 

Germany, Italy, Japan, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.



[47] These nations are Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, 

Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, 

Luxembourg, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Spain, 

Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States. We 

obtained demographic data on these nations from the United Nations 

Population Division and labor force statistics from the ILO.



[48] For additional details on key elements of each country’s pension 

system, please see appendixes II to IV. 



[49] All dollar figures are calculated using an exchange rate of 120 

yen per dollar.



[50] The Employees’ Pension Fund is a public corporation made up of 

businesses and insured individuals. Management duties are performed by 

trust banks, insurance companies, and investment advisory companies and 

there must be an option to receive benefits as a lifetime annuity for 

those with over 20 years of service. TQPPs, while also managed by 

financial institutions, do not have a carve-out of national employees 

benefits and are not required to offer lifetime annuities.



[51] The Ministry of Health and Welfare is now the Ministry of Health, 

Labor and Welfare.



[52] Silver Human Resource Centers are community-based organizations 

designed to facilitate the continued involvement of people over age 60 

in community life.



[53] Most benefits within the Swedish social security system are linked 

to the “base amount,” an amount of Swedish Krona (SEK) that is set each 

year by the government and appreciated by the Consumer Price Index. For 

2002, the base amount was SEK 37,900 (roughly $4,341 at $1 = SEK 8.73). 

The ceiling for all social security transfers is 7.5 base amounts. 

Beginning in 2001, the ceiling for the national pension system has been 

indexed to the growth in average wages and not the price index, and the 

base amount for this system is somewhat higher (SEK 38 800, roughly 

$4,444).



[54] There will be a gradual transition from the “old” to “new” 

national pension systems for persons born between 1938 and 1953. 

Persons born in 1938, for example, will receive 20 percent of their 

retirement benefit from the new system and 80 percent from the old 

system. The share of benefits from the new system increases for each 

following birth year until persons born in1954 receive their entire 

benefit from the new system. Consequently, the structure of the old 

pension system will continue to influence old-age pensions for some 

time.



[55] In the early 1990s, unemployment reached historically high levels 

in Sweden, seriously eroding the contribution base for the national 

pension system. In addition, in the fall of 1991, the Social-Democratic 

government was replaced by a four-party, nonsocialist government.



[56] Employees only pay on earnings up to the pension ceiling, while 

employers pay on all earnings.



[57] The adjustment mechanisms discussed in this paragraph, such as the 

indexation of benefits to life expectancy and growth of the 

contribution base, are expected to stabilize the system and keep the 

contribution rate constant indefinitely.



[58] The contributions credited to the notional accounts are for 

bookkeeping purposes only. The actual funds collected are comingled and 

used to pay current benefits. 



[59] In a simplified form, the pension annuity under the NDC plan is 

calculated by dividing the notional capital balance at the chosen time 

of retirement by estimated average (unisex) life expectancy for men and 

women at the age of retirement: Annuity = Capital/ Life expectancy. As 

life expectancy increases, members of later generations retiring at the 

same age and with the same amount of notional capital as members of 

earlier generations would receive lower pensions.



[60] It is interesting to note that even under the old systems, 

employer-provided pensions were highly portable across the four plans.



[61] Currently, the contribution rate for private sector blue-collar 

workers is 3.5 percent of gross pay; for municipal workers it is 4 

percent.



[62] The new pension plan for central government workers also includes 

the option of taking a partial pension beginning at age of 61. There is 

some concern among pension experts that this plan will encourage 

workers in this sector to choose part-time over full-time work after 

age 61.



[63] Workers over the age of 65, however, continue to lack coverage by 

unemployment insurance or sick leave insurance. 



[64] Reaching an agreement on changing the mandatory retirement age was 

difficult and required extensive negotiations. The passage of this 

legislation has also been controversial, with two of the three main 

trade union confederations arguing that it constituted unwarranted 

interference by the government in collective bargaining. 



[65] Dollar figures are calculated using an exchange rate of 0.6 U.K. 

pounds to one U.S. dollar. 



[66] From 2010 to 2020, the women’s eligibility age for the national 

pension system is increasing to 65 to be equal with men’s. 

Consequently, the number of years of contributions required for women 

to receive a full state basic pension will also gradually increase. 



[67] Eligible households include single males, single females, and 

couples in which the oldest member is over the age of 60.



[68] From the 1970s until the1990s when the U.K. was experiencing 

economic downturns, employers made use of their pension plans to shrink 

their workforces by providing generous benefits to encourage workers to 

retire early. 



[69] Cabinet Office and Performance and Innovation Unit, Winning the 

Generation Game (London, United Kingdom, April 2000).



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