Brendan Burgess
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Interesting paper. I agree broadly with the comments of @Allpartied and @NoRegretsCoyote. Just to embelish these a little. For a start these benefits are not at all guaranteed, as we have seen in the debate about the pension age. In particular the rate of increase is far from guaranteed. The report assumes increases in lines with wage inflation.
@Duke of Marmalade @Allpartied @NoRegretsCoyote
Would you guys please set the Irish Fiscal Advisory Council straight?
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Immediate action on future funding for State pension age of 66, urged by spending watchdog
Report calls for ringfenced State Pension Fund financed by 3.5% rise in PRSI over next four years
The report argues that a separate State Pension Fund to fund pensions should be designed to take into the account the predictable long-term variation between the number of people paying PRSI contributions and the number of people claiming pensions. Other benefits would continue to be paid out of the Social Insurance Fund.
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The report argues that a separate State Pension Fund to fund pensions should be designed to take into the account the predictable long-term variation between the number of people paying PRSI contributions and the number of people claiming pensions. Other benefits would continue to be paid out of the Social Insurance Fund.
...
“It may lead to the creation of significant pension reserves if demographic variations are smoothed by requiring current generations to contribute more and limiting the increase in PRSI rates for future generations,” the authors say, essentially moving from a fully-pay-as-you-go model to one that is partially funded in advance of known liabilities.