Gordon Gekko
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Pretty simple really...
Why not offer transfer values to people who are entitled to public sector pensions or State Pensions of any kind?
The NTMA can raise the finance at close to zero.
The people who take up the offer should tend to be the more expensive ones. The State gets off the hook and investment markets take care of the rest.
In my view, the State would actually gain in the form of taxation.
Gordon
Not in real life.The NTMA can raise the finance at close to zero.
Not in real life.
The extent of the State's unfunded pension liabilities is so large that such a sum couldn't possibly be borrowed at anything like a sustainable cost.
And then there's the small matter of the State's obligations under the Growth & Stability Pact...
Hi Gordon
I think that Defined Benefit Schemes should just be closed down. They should just be transferred from DB to DC. There should be no option.
If you offer it, there would be adverse selection. For example, single people would avail of it as the spouse's pension is valueless to them.
People who may have a lower life expectancy would avail of it also.
Brendan
You're missing my point Gordon.The State is raising debt at close to zero as we speak, so it’s very much real life.
You're missing my point Gordon.
The total value of the State's unfunded pension liabilities equates to something like ~200% of our gross national income. There is no way the State could issue anything like that level of debt, on top of our existing national debt, to "buy out" these liabilities. It's simply not realistic.
Maybe I'm being thick but that still makes no sense to me.When the State’s unfunded pension liabilities are talked about, it’s the €900k figure that’s used.
Maybe I'm being thick but that still makes no sense to me.
The CSO's estimates of the State's unfunded pension liabilities certainly refer to accrued-to-date liabilities.
It did indeed. And the ultimate net cost to the State of averting the near complete collapse of our financial system will prove a drop in the ocean compared to the ultimate cost of funding the State's pension liabilities. No doubt about it.The State had to find a truckload of cash to shore up the financial system.
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