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Pensions, Purchasing-Power Risk, Inflation and Indexation [electronic resource] / Edward Whitehouse

By: Material type: ArticleArticleSeries: OECD Social, Employment and Migration Working Papers ; no.77.Publication details: Paris : OECD Publishing, 2009.Description: 40 p. ; 21 x 29.7cmSubject(s): Other classification:
  • J14
  • D80
  • D14
Online resources: Abstract: The rapid rise in inflation in 2006-07 has attracted attention - once again - both to how pensions systems should react to changes in prices, and to how they do so in practice. Although inflation is now falling as a result of lower commodity prices and weakening demand, this brings with it the risk of deflation - falling prices - which also raises questions as to how pension systems should react. Most OECD countries have a legislated commitment to indexation of pensions in payment. However, the empirical evidence in this paper shows that these rules have frequently been over-ridden. Furthermore, because indexation to price inflation rather than wage inflation is much more common - and wages can be expected to rise more rapidly than prices - the effect of following legislated indexation rules will be to reduce pensioner incomes compared with those of the working-age population. However, indexation to prices is less costly, allowing a larger initial pension than under earnings indexation for a given budget constraint. This paper sets out current, national indexation policies and historical data on how pensions have been adjusted in practice. It examines different indexation policies: to prices, earnings or a mix of the two; the choice of the price index and progressive indexation (where smaller pensions are increased more rapidly than larger).
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Working Paper Biblioteca Digital Colección OECD OECD 227182142567 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan
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The rapid rise in inflation in 2006-07 has attracted attention - once again - both to how pensions systems should react to changes in prices, and to how they do so in practice. Although inflation is now falling as a result of lower commodity prices and weakening demand, this brings with it the risk of deflation - falling prices - which also raises questions as to how pension systems should react. Most OECD countries have a legislated commitment to indexation of pensions in payment. However, the empirical evidence in this paper shows that these rules have frequently been over-ridden. Furthermore, because indexation to price inflation rather than wage inflation is much more common - and wages can be expected to rise more rapidly than prices - the effect of following legislated indexation rules will be to reduce pensioner incomes compared with those of the working-age population. However, indexation to prices is less costly, allowing a larger initial pension than under earnings indexation for a given budget constraint. This paper sets out current, national indexation policies and historical data on how pensions have been adjusted in practice. It examines different indexation policies: to prices, earnings or a mix of the two; the choice of the price index and progressive indexation (where smaller pensions are increased more rapidly than larger).

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