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Consulting
Entity-Wide Risk Management for Pension Funds
Speakers : Malcolm Kemp, Managing Director, Nematrian Limited
March 30, 2014
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Members Only
AI / Data Science
PBSS: AI for Pension Funds: Insights and Use Cases
Unlock how Artificial Intelligence is reshaping pensions and social security work. Join us for an insightful session featuring leading actuarial AI expert Ronald Richman, who will share practical applications of AI in longevity modelling, experience analysis, and actuarial workflow automation. This webinar will highlight real-world use insights, emerging opportunities, and what actuaries doing work in pensions and social security need to know to stay ahead in an AI-driven future.
Be sure to join us for what promises to be an informative and engaging discussion.
Speaker: Ronald Richman
Moderator: John Anderson
Be sure to join us for what promises to be an informative and engaging discussion.
Speaker: Ronald Richman
Moderator: John Anderson
Members Only
Social Security
Social Security Reforms in Latin America – Actuarial Guidelines
Latin America is facing the problems of ageing and the results of social security schemes (pensions) based on pay-as-you go basis or individual capitalization. In both cases, respectively problems are arising, due to the negative gap between incomes as contributions and expenditures, and on low replacement rates. My experience in actuarial valuations and pension reforms indicates that there is a need of sound actuarial participation, with elevated level of professionalism and applying ISAP-1 and ISAP-2, with high abilities in communication. Also, negotiation and transparency are important subjects. Different participants, like social and economic sectors, implies a complicate area to achieve an agreement. What actuaries can do? We must work in teams, without losing our identity and professionalism, combining quantitative activity with soft abilities, to obtain consensus and at least, to get a reasonable medium term interim solution. The paper will show guidelines to perform an appropriate work in this social conflictive area of actuarial practice.
Members Only
Social Security
Consequences on measuring adequacy and sustainability in social security after pandemic
Labor markets, typically subject to ageing population, today are sensible also to the implications still deriving from the recent Covid-19 pandemic. In such scenario, it is increasingly challenging to ensure that social security systems continue to meet their objectives of adequacy of benefits and sustainability constraints. Financial sustainability and adequacy of benefits are two sides of the same matter and must be jointly considered. In the medium to long term, unsustainable pension systems may not be able to guarantee enough level of the benefits. At the same time, the financial sustainability, pursued through a compression of the benefits, may be not socially feasible. In this work the so-called Pension Wealth indicator (PW) is used to measure the adequacy on benefits provided by social security schemes, in the light of the after effects of the pandemic with a focus on the Italian workers’ protection system. PW is the ratio between the actual value, on pensionable age, of all the pension payments that are expected to be paid (generally for the entire life) and the last salary received. PW is highly related to the future mortality trends and its study may give useful information on how to face the recent shocks on expectancy of life. PW can be thought as the lump-sum needed to buy an annuity giving the same cash flow as that of a generic annuity. The PW is generally referred to old age pensioners, but the aim of this study is to present a redefinition of PW with reference to specific vulnerable workers: the Italian injured worker broken down by accidents and occupational diseases and by impairment level.
Members Only
Consulting
The challenges of building durable long term care insurance offer in France
What are the levers of attractiveness of long-term care insurance that we need to act on? In France, the creation of a 5th branch of Social Security dedicated to autonomy is a significant step forward. However public finances will not be able to assume the costs linked to the loss of autonomy of all our fellow citizens and families will not have all the financial resources to absorb the remaining expenses of their elders. These issues undeniably argue for the use of insurance solutions to support the public authorities. It is therefore essential that we, as actuaries, continue to work on making our long-term care products more desirable and durable. This workshop will be an opportunity to present an overview of the long-term care insurance market, highlighting in particular the issues, practices, market projects and prospects specific to this risk.
Members Only
Consulting
The Constraints of Pension Sustainability
Taxation, regional regulations and certain exogenous factors might affect a plan sponsor’s interpretation, approaches and success in achieving sustainability of their defined benefit plan. Rules regarding the design, funding and taxation of most defined benefit plans are regional, typically by country, or perhaps by state or province. The rules usually focus on encouraging sponsorship and participation, and/or ensuring sufficient funding. There are often other goals, such as limiting tax deductions or preventing discrimination by age, gender, pay-level, etc. While they may be well-intended, the rules can often constrain a sponsor’s ability to implement effective, long-term policies that seek to optimize plan sustainability. Layered on top of the general rules are often tax laws that can influence or reward sponsor and participant actions. These incentives, or sometimes disincentives, can lead to sponsor and participant choices that might be counter to a plan’s optimal path to sustainability. In addition, an organization’s approach to plan sustainability could be constrained by exogenous factors, such as: prioritization of short-term financial results diverting from long-term funding; demographic aging if benefit costs (intentionally or unintentionally) rely on intergenerational cross-subsidies; long-term global trends affecting capital market returns, long-term return expectations or inflation experience; and mortality improvements. The paper will examine how these constraints can affect a plan’s sustainability, how a sponsoring organization might better achieve sustainability if unconstrained, and a case study of the United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund, which operates free of certain constraints that exist for plans operating under regional regulations and/or taxation regimes.
