Asian workers head for poor old age
PHILIPPINES: Hundreds of millions of workers behind Asia's economic
miracle are heading into uncertain old age after governments failed to
set aside enough funds for their pensions, said a book released Tuesday.
“Without far-reaching reforms, the financial burdens of these (Asian
pension) schemes on future workers may become politically unacceptable,”
said the book, edited by Asian Development Bank principal economist Park
Donghyun.
The book, “Pension Systems in East and Southeast Asia: Promoting
Fairness and Sustainability”, forecast current or looming problems both
in rapidly greying East Asia as well as younger Southeast Asia.
“Just as Asia's economic landscape was transformed... due to
exceptionally rapid growth, its demographic landscape is transforming
due to a change in population age structure that is unprecedented both
in its scale and speed,” it said.
China will have 200 million people aged 60 or older by 2015, the year
before its working-age population is forecast to begin to shrink, it
said.
Its private-sector workers contribute a fifth of their incomes to
pension pools, yet retired workers now get just 1,400 yuan (about $221)
a month.
Its public sector workers meanwhile do not contribute at all, the
study found.
In Indonesia, where workers retire at 55, the pension system covers
only 14 percent of private sector employees in Indonesia, according to
the book.
It called for the system to be expanded more than eight-fold to cover
informal sector workers.
AFP
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