Tbilisi PERSPECTIVE Pension System Reform in Georgia Comments and Alternatives MARTIN HUTSEBAUT December 2017 n 31 October 2017, the Government of Georgia publicly presented her reform plan for the country’s pension system. The draft law envisions a new pension savings scheme that is based on personal accounts and does not include any element of solidarity. The principle is“everyone for him- or herself”. n all workers over 40 years of age would have the possibility to opt-out of the new pensions scheme, hundreds of thousands of Georgian citizens will remain without a decent pension in the future. Thus, the government proposal does nothing to alleviate the threat of massive old-age poverty. n the Georgian government should strengthen the basic pension, and develop a second pillar of the pension system that includes two tiers: a mandatory payas-you-go(PAYG) scheme that would deliver immediate benefits from 2020 onwards, and a funded defined-contribution scheme for workers up to the age of 50, that would increase security in the long run. n overwhelming majority of European pension systems have pay-as-you-go-schemes at their core. The counter-argument that PAYG is not possible in Georgia due to the challenging demographics of the country is not valid, as the new system would start from scratch.
Druckschrift
Pension system reform in Georgia : comments and alternatives
Entstehung
Einzelbild herunterladen
verfügbare Breiten