Immigrants – Sweden’s new poor pensioners

This gloomy future scenario is revealed by a new government inquiry on the pension system carried out by researchers from the School of Business, Economics and Law of the University of Gothenburg on behalf of the Social Council at the Ministry of Social Affairs. But the inquiry also shows that there are ways of improving the expected standard of living.

”When we looked at the economic resources of immigrants from a country outside the OECD area, we found that this group has far worse prospects of achieving a high standard living as pensioners than those born in Sweden. And the public pension system in its present form will not succeed in evening out these differences when the pensions are taken,” says Lennart Flood, professor of economics and one of the members of the inquiry.

As the pensions of immigrants, especially those of women immigrants, will be too low to provide the basis for a reasonable standard of living, both maintenance support for the elderly and housing support will be required to increase disposable income for these groups. Professor Flood proposes another solution.

”We can bring about an increase in pension levels by index-linking the guarantee pension to incomes. An index-linked guarantee pension together with 40 years of residence provides a public pension that is between 70 and 80% of the old-age pension received by a man born in Sweden. The higher guarantee pension will be partially self-financed by resulting in a reduced need for maintenance support for the elderly and housing grants.

Such a solution would also benefit other groups who are at risk of not having sufficient pension income to live on, groups that have features in common with those born outside Sweden.

“Women born in the 1930s and 1940s in Sweden who have been housewives for most of their working lives and therefore have low pension entitlements are another group who would benefit from index-linking,” says Professor Flood.

When various political winds are blowing, there tends to be talk of raising the guarantee pension. But merely adjusting this level is not a sustainable solution in the long term, Professor Flood believes.

”Projections 20-40 years ahead show that the present-day pension system is unsusainable. Merely compensating guarantee pension for inflation is not a sufficient answer. Given economic growth, this means that pensions will be steadily eroded in relation to incomes in the working population. What is needed instead is index-linking of the guarantee pension to income levels in order to bring about a fair system in which everyone shares in growth in society.

For more information, please contact: Lennart Flood
Telephone: +46 (0)31–786 1331, +46 (0)706–764 309
E-mail: lennart.flood@economics.gu.se

Media Contact

Helena Aaberg idw

More Information:

http://www.gu.se

All latest news from the category: Business and Finance

This area provides up-to-date and interesting developments from the world of business, economics and finance.

A wealth of information is available on topics ranging from stock markets, consumer climate, labor market policies, bond markets, foreign trade and interest rate trends to stock exchange news and economic forecasts.

Back to home

Comments (0)

Write a comment

Newest articles

Cichlids practicing brood care in 3D-printed snail shells

Time to Leave Home? Revealed Insights into Brood Care of Cichlids

Shell-dwelling cichlids take intense care of their offspring, which they raise in abandoned snail shells. A team at the Max Planck Institute for Biological Intelligence used 3D-printed snail shells to…

Amphiphile-enhanced wearable fabric generating electricity from movement

Smart Fabrics: Innovative Comfortable Wearable Tech

Researchers have demonstrated new wearable technologies that both generate electricity from human movement and improve the comfort of the technology for the people wearing them. The work stems from an…

Visualization of Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) stability over 60 years

Going Steady—Study Reveals North Atlantic’s Gulf Stream Remains Robust

A study by the University of Bern and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in the USA concludes that the ocean circulation in the North Atlantic, which includes the Gulf Stream,…