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Title: Greece needs to reform its pension system


123-t - January 27, 2006 09:18 PM (GMT)
Greece needs to reform its pension system, FinMin says

The pension system is a time bomb ready to be exploded unless reforms were made, Greek Economy and Finance Minister George Alogoskoufis said on Friday.

Addressing a seminar organised by the non-governmental organisation "Citizens for the Future", Alogoskoufis said that in 10, 15 or 20 years from now "no one knows right now, there will be a problem unless we take the iniatives needed to defuse this time bomb and to transform the pension system into an opportunity for the country".

The Greek minister noted that a dialogue over the pension system should proceed this year and referred to the three pylons of the government's economic policy, tax reform, a new investment law on growth and regional convergence, and joint ventures between public and private sectors.

Alogoskoufis said the government was promoting a series of legislative initiatives aimed to improve economic performance and solve past problems.

These initiatives are:

-setting up an agency of fiscal auditors to ensure public spending and better management of existing funds,

-making a better use of public sector's real estate assets,

-reforming a law on Community Support Framework and promoting a National Support Framework and,

-supporting the role of a National Council of Exports.

Alogoskoufis said the government was poised to proceed with its reform programme this year and stressed that the public sector was gradually limiting its participation in the country's economy.


http://www.ana.gr/anaweb/user/showplain?ma...56053&service=8

123-t - January 30, 2006 09:30 PM (GMT)
ALOGOSKOUFIS CALLS FOR IMMEDIATE DIALOGUE ON PENSION SYSTEM
Athens, 30 January 2006 (17:18 UTC+2)


The country's pension system is a "time-bomb" that is likely to explode in the next 15, 20 or 30 years, Greek Economy and Finance Minister George Alogoskoufis warned on Monday.

Addressing a seminar entitled, "The future of Greece's Pension System and the Third Pylon", organized in Athens by the Hellenic-American Chamber of Commerce in cooperation with the Association of Insurance Companies of Greece, the Greek minister said the problem was not urgent, "but close", adding that the issue needed mild and well focused interventions.

Alogoskoufis stressed that the government was committed to its promise that no decisions would be taken on reforming the pension system by the end of its ongoing four-year term, while urging for a dialogue on the issue to begin.

The pension system is expensive, ineffective and unfair, Alogoskoufis said, adding that together with Labour Minister Panos Panagiotopoulos they have been trying for months to persuade political parties, employers' groups and employees' unions to begin a dialogue. The state's contribution to the pension system totaled 5.0 percent of GDP and could reach 15 pct in the future, Alogoskoufis said.

The Greek minister said a dialogue would help to find an answer to the question of funding the pension system in the future, while adding that a milestone reform in 1992 ensured the viability of the current system.



http://www.mpa.gr/article.html?doc_id=564956

123-t - February 4, 2006 06:40 PM (GMT)
Defusing the social security time bomb
NIKOS NIKOLAOU

Over the last 30 years, labor unionists and the popular press have regularly published articles sounding the warning bell that the country’s major social insurance funds, including the biggest, the Social Insurance Foundation (IKA), are verging on collapse and will not be able to pay out their pensions.

Much of this is scaremongering that often has a party-political inspiration, aiming simply at frightening

pensioners and turning them against the government that happens to be in power, rather than elucidating the economy’s major problem — which is, indeed, the solvency of pension funds.

These unionists, who mostly belong to the federation of social insurance fund employees, would do well to remember that even in 1985, when the economy was on the verge of collapse and foreign exchange reserves had dwindled to about $200,000, pensions were paid in full. The same is bound to happen now, despite the intense pressure to cut the huge deficit in public finances. Deputy Finance Minister Petros Doukas, whom I asked about it, assured me that no pensioner will be deprived of his pension. He also stressed that the government intends to complete within its current term the dialogue on this most serious problem with all parties concerned, so that with moderate and well-aimed corrective measures after 2008, the pension system will become sounder and more reliable.

But I might just ask the dangermongers: Is it not true that without the reforms of 1990-1993, the system would be in real trouble and the disbursement of pensions would be in doubt? I have heard ministers of all governments since 1994 admit that that reform prolonged the life of the social insurance system by at least 10 years. So, we had better expedite a bold reform now that will give it a further lease of life, without bringing the economy to its knees.

Of course, this will mean that the various pension funds will continue being subsidized by the state budget. Given the continuously worsening ratio of working people to pensioners, no one believes that the system will be able to survive by itself; budget contributions will remain necessary, but only up to a point — and not to the detriment of the rest of the economy.

According to forecasts of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), public spending on pensions will remain at around 12.6 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) to the end of this decade, but will rise to 15.4 percent by 2020, 19.6 percent by 2030, 23.8 percent by 2040 and 24.8 percent by 2050. These are truly staggering projections; a country cannot very well survive when it has to spend more than half of its budget on pensions. We will be an economy without a future.

We may remember Andreas Papandreou’s famous saying, “The country will either eliminate its debt or the debt will eliminate the country.” Greek public debt is now 210 billion euros, or 115 percent of GDP. If this is breathtaking, why should we not be panicked by the actuarial deficit of the social insurance system, which is estimated between 260 and 300 billion euros? As Economy Minister Giorgos Alogoskoufis said the other day, this time bomb must be defused in time.


http://www.ekathimerini.com/4dcgi/news/eco...date=04/02/2006




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