We Are # 29 – WOW!

By: Russ Kamp, Managing Director, Ryan ALM, Inc.

The  16th annual Mercer/CFA Institute Global Pension Index report was released on Oct. 15. I want to extend a big thank you to Mercer and the CFA for their collective effort to elevate retirement issues, while celebrating those countries who are getting it right. According to the survey, “the overall index value is based on three weighted sub-indices—adequacy (40%), sustainability (35%) and integrity (25%)—to measure each retirement income system. Adequacy looked at areas such as benefits, system design, savings and government support. Sustainability examined pension coverage, total assets, demography and other areas. Integrity encompassed regulation, governance and protection.” There are more than 50 indicators that support these three broad categories.

The United States was given a score of 60.4 (63 in 2023’s study), which placed our retirement readiness at 29 of 48 countries that were evaluated. That 29 is 7 spots lower than 2023’s rank. According to the Mercer CFA study, a score of 60.4 places us slightly below the average score (63.4) among those ranked and we were given a letter grade of C+. I don’t know about you but if I had scored a 60 (scale of 0-100) during my school days, my letter grade would have likely been an F. Based on how I feel that we are prepared as a nation, I think that an F is much more appropriate than a C+. What about you?

I’m not trying to pick on the U.S. retirement system, which scored 63.9 on adequacy, 58.4 on sustainability and 57.5 on integrity, with Integrity being the poorest ranking as it trailed the worldwide average score by >16 points at 74.1. Our retirement system was evaluated based on the Social Security system and voluntary private pensions, which may be job-related (DB or DC) or personal, such as an IRA. Other systems with comparable overall index values to the U.S. (60-65) included Colombia (63), Saudi Arabia (60.5) and Kazakhstan (64.0). I don’t know about you but being ranked among those countries doesn’t make me feel warm and fuzzy about our effort or achievement. Systems scoring the highest were the Netherlands (84.8), Iceland (83.4), Denmark (81.6), and Israel (80.2) – they were given an ‘A’ grade.

Anyone participating in our industry knows that can AND MUST do better. The loss of DB pension plans within the private sector is a very harmful trend. Leakage within DC plans makes them more like glorified savings accounts rather than retirement vehicles, and Social Security provides small relief for a majority of recipients. As I’ve uttered on many occasions, asking untrained individuals to fund, manage, and then disburse a “retirement benefit” without the financial means, investment skill, and a crystal ball to forecast longevity is just silly policy.

Mercer and the CFA institute recommended a series of potential reforms to improve the long-term success of the US retirement system. I just loved this one:

Promoting higher labor force participation at older ages, which will increase the savings available for retirement and limit the continuing increase in the length of retirement;

A truly amazing suggestion – if you never retire then you don’t have to worry about whether or not your system will provide an adequate benefit! Problem solved! Many Americans would welcome the opportunity to extend their careers/employment opportunities, but some jobs require physical labor not easily done at more mature ages, while many American companies are anxious to rid themselves of higher priced and experienced talent in favor of younger workers (ageism?).

When I wrote about this survey last year, I’d hoped that the higher US interest rate environment would begin to improve outcomes for our workers whether their plans are a defined benefit or defined contribution offering. Unfortunately, current trends have US rates falling again. That just puts more pressure on DB plans and individual participants in DC plans and encourages (forces) everyone to take more risk. That development isn’t going to help next year’s score!