Retirement in Chile is a private – and heated – matter
By Reese Erlich | Special to The Christian Science Monitor
SANTIAGO, CHILE - It wouldn't be an election year in the US if the controversial topic of Social Security didn't come up.
In March, the trustees of US Social Security said in their annual report
that, although the forecast for the retirement program is slightly
better than previous estimations, immediate action is necessary to fix
its underlying weaknesses. The program is expected to go bankrupt
in 2041.
Chile's private pension system is looked at by some as a model of how the
US should address the long-term solvency of Social Security,
though detractors say the South American country's program still has significant
flaws.
In 1981, Chile's state-sponsored pension plan faced bankruptcy. A group
of US-trained, conservative economists convinced then-dictator
Gen. Augusto Pinochet to privatize the system.
Chile abolished its mandatory, state-sponsored pension plan and created what amounts to a giant 401(k) plan.
The system requires 13 percent of a worker's wage to be automatically deducted
and sent to one of seven independently managed
mutual-fund companies selected by the worker, with a small part of the
contribution going towards disability insurance. Neither employers
nor the government contribute to the individual accounts. The contributions
are tax-deferred and remain under the workers' control if they
change jobs.
The system has proven successful, according to Luis Larraín, a member
of the board of directors of Habitat, Chile's second-largest pension
fund. "There has not been a bankruptcy," he says. "Nobody has stolen the
money from the workers. That was the typical argument against
private administration."
The returns for Chile's program have exceeded the Chilean stock market
since 1981, and far outpace the previous system. The funds'
investments have grown an average of 10.7 percent over the past 21 years.
This has allowed retirees to receive pensions amounting to 78
percent of their mean income over the previous 10 years, according to a
1995 academic study.
Guillermo Arthur, president of the association of Chile's pension mutual
funds, says the US should follow Chile's lead. "It would be a big
advance," he says.
But critics say the good statistics are misleading because people hope
to retire with an income close to their earnings during the final few
years of employment.
Also, the system still requires federal subsidies.
"Without doubt, the Chilean government has created a very sick child,"
says Jorge Millan, pension specialist with Chile's largest trade union
federation. "If we don't operate, the child will die."
Mr. Millan would like to see the return to a system in which employers
are obligated to make matching contributions to their employees'
plans.
Former high school teacher Olga Seguel's pension amounts to less than half
her salary when she retired. Ms. Seguel has friends who, in
1981, opted to remain in the traditional teacher retirement fund. They
are getting pensions close to their final salary, she says. Under the
old system, employers had to match the teachers' monthly contribution,
thus increasing the pension. Anyone becoming a teacher after
1981 had to join the privatized system.
Authorities realized that, given Chile's poverty rate of 21 percent, some
workers would never be able to save much toward retirement. So the
government guarantees a minimum pension to anyone who has worked as a regular
employee for 20 years.
The government subsidizes the difference between what workers receive from
their mutual funds and the guaranteed minimum. That
minimum pension, although indexed for inflation, is now $110 per month,
compared to a minimum wage of $156.
Juan Gumucio, a law professor at the Bolivarian University, says that by
2010 as many as 60 percent of retirees will only qualify for the
minimum pension. Mr. Larraín disputes that figure, saying minimum
pensions will account for 15 to 18 percent of the total.
Even Larraín admits, however, that the system has another major
problem. Forty-two percent of the workforce isn't covered by any pension
system, according to government statistics. These are mostly independent
contractors and workers in the informal economy. They can
make voluntary contributions to the system, but almost none do because
their incomes are so low.
Larraín says the government should create tax incentives to encourage the participation of this sector.