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By Chris Kuan

The annual Mercer Global Pension Index recently released showed that Singapore ranked 10th overall (the report provides the index scores by alphabetical order so I have to ranked them myself).

ranking-pension
Table from Mercer Global Pension Index

This looks good. Those ranked higher are the usual suspects: by ranking order Denmark, Netherlands, Australia, Sweden, Switzerland, Finland, Canada, Chile and …. yes that collapsed state or I had reliably heard from one of our ministers, the UK.

Before, we all sigh in relief and the pro-PAP fanboys and fangirls yelled “I told you so!”, the high rank does not mean Singapore is that highly ranked when it comes to that all important aspect – Adequacy which takes up 40% of the overall ranking and here Singapore fell to 19th behind even Brazil, China, Poland and Mexico. Now do recall that Mr. Tharman said that our retirement adequacy is comparable or even better than to those in the 1st World countries when we unlock the value of our housing. This tells us where we stand on a like for like basis, i.e. not comparing apples to oranges. Those countries who are highly ranked overall are highly ranked in Adequacy as well.

In terms of Sustainability which is 35% of the overall index, Singapore is ranked No. 8 for issues such as contributions, government debt, total assets and coverage with demography likely to hold back the score. This should not surprise because the level of contributions in Singapore is high and the government fiscal position is strong. Although it will be difficult for Mercer to highlight the individual wrinkles, it should be noted that the government ‘s strong fiscal position is reliant to a significant extent on the drainage of those contributions via the medium of real estate prices. This should be born in mind.

This should not surprise because the level of contributions in Singapore is high and the government fiscal position is strong. Although it will be difficult for Mercer to highlight the individual wrinkles, it should be noted that the government ‘s strong fiscal position is reliant to a significant extent on the drainage of those contributions via the medium of real estate prices. This should be born in mind.

In terms of Integrity which looks at such things as governance, protection and communication, Singapore is ranked 12.

In my opinion, there is a trade off between Adequacy and Sustainability. So it is important where we stand in the trade off. Given the large disparity between the two, quite clearly we have sacrificed Adequacy for Sustainability. That is to say we accepted or are provided with comparatively inadequate payouts in exchange for making the government finances stronger. After all, there is a strong reason why Singapore is rated triple A from both S&P and Moody’s.

But as this survey shows and I have repeatedly made this point before, that very high credit rating comes at a cost to our retirement adequacy among other thinks such as social benefits. Put in local parlance – government rich, people poor.

But here is the thing though: the trade-off could be better for Adequacy without hurting Sustainability. Australia, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland all scored higher than Singapore both in Adequacy and Sustainability. If we are talking about improving Adequacy by accepting lower Sustainability, Chile whose system is closest to Singapore (without the housing withdrawals), Finland and Canada provided better adequacy with sustainability not much below Singapore’s.

Fruit for thought or if you rather, clearing the smoke.

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