institute of economic affairs

02 September 2010

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Public Sector Pension Debt Now Over £1trillion

Public Sector Pension Debt Now Over £1trillion

An IEA study reveals the true magnitude of public sector pension debt.

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In a new study*, published today by the IEA, Neil Record**, the leading expert on public sector pension deficits, puts the burden of future public sector pensions at £1.025 trillion – this estimate is nearly twice as great as the government’s own estimates and approximately equal to one year’s national income. Neil Record argues that government estimates do not take proper account of trends in mortality, likely public sector pay increases and market interest rates.

Each year, the government makes new pension commitments to public sector workers worth over £40billion.

The recent very high level of public sector pay increases has led to a significant rise in the pension debt burden. Neil Record comments, “When the government increases nurses’ pay by, say, 10%, that increases the whole of the value of the past pension liabilities the government has accumulated in respect of current workers by 10%.”

The pension liabilities that the government has accumulated are just like other forms of national debt, argues Neil Record. The government must honour those commitments and they will represent a huge burden on future generations of taxpayers. The cost of meeting the public sector pension commitments already made will peak at £90billion per annum in 2045. Commenting on the study, Philip Booth, Editorial Director at the IEA, said, “People who are currently too young to vote will bear the greatest costs. This is not a legacy one generation of politicians should leave their children. It is a scandal that the government has only made minor proposals regarding public sector schemes. At the same time, increased regulations and the imposition of accounting standards on the private sector are driving out private sector final salary pensions.”

When calculated correctly, the cost of providing pensions for public sector workers varies from 35% of salary for male teachers to 72% of salary for policewomen. Public sector employers such as local education authorities, police authorities and so on are charged much less than this.

Governance in public sector schemes is also very weak. For example, 39% of local government employees and 68% of fire service employees retire early through ill health.

Neil Record, together with Philip Booth and Nick Silver who provide commentaries on Neil Record’s research, suggest a number of ways to deal with the growing public sector pensions deficit:

• Whilst recognising that little can be done to reduce liabilities accumulated so far, It is important that public sector employers pay the full costs of pensions promises made to their employees in the future.

• The government could fund future public sector pension commitments by issuing government bonds and investing the bonds in the pension schemes.

• Government employers should have the option of giving their workers significant pay increases and allow them to make alternative pension arrangements.


Notes to editors

The IEA is a registered educational charity and independent of all political parties. It accepts no corporate funds linked to research areas and allows no corporate donor to exceed more than 2% of annual income.

*Sir Humphrey’s Legacy: Facing Up to the Cost of Public Sector Pensions, by Neil Record, Hobart Paper 156, The Institute of Economic Affairs, £10.00. The study can be downloaded below.


**Neil Record is Chairman and CEO of Record Currency Management. He has previously worked as an Economist at the Bank of England. He is a member of the Investment Committee of Nuffield College, Oxford.

Contacts

Neil Record Tel: 01753 852222

Philip Booth (IEA) Tel: 020 7799 8912

Richard Wellings (IEA) Tel: 020 7799 8919

Institute of Economic Affairs, 2 Lord North Street, Westminster, London, SW1P 3LB | tel: 020 7799 8900 | fax: 020 7799 2137 | email: iea@iea.org.uk

Registered In England 755502, Charity No CC/235 351, Limited by Guarantee

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