ISSUE #20 Feb – May 2014
Role of Public Policy Schools
THE BIG IDEA
Social Pensions in Singapore Mukul Asher and Azad Bali recently published a paper in which they argued for a radical restructuring of Singapore’s system for financing retirement. Here, Azad Bali summarises the key ideas Subscribe to
Raw Growth Making Real Impact?
150 Years of China’s Misfit
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ingapore is expected to experience rapid ageing of its population in the next two decades – since 1975, it has a below replacement rate fertility. People more than 65 years old will increase from 0.46 million in 2010, to 1.4 million 2030, an increase of over 200 per cent in just two decades. Many will live till 85, or into their 90s. Therefore, old-age income security is increasingly becoming an important economic, social, and political issue. Singapore’s pension system is based on two major premises. First, it is possible to finance retirement expenditure almost entirely by mandatory savings of households, which are micro-managed and intermediated by the state. Second, the pension system should focus on mitigating absolute rather than relative poverty. This is a system with many limitations in securing old-age income security.
1. Use CPF Assets more productively to provide oldage income security One of the main purposes of mandatory savings to finance retirement expenditure is that these savings would be intermediated p continued on page 6 through financial and capital markets and at http://lkyspp.sg/subscribe-to-GIA