Meeting Customers’ Retirement Needs and the Effect on the Retirement Age.
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Transcript of Meeting Customers’ Retirement Needs and the Effect on the Retirement Age.
Meeting Customers’ Retirement Needs and the Effect on the Retirement Age
Meeting Customer’s Retirement Needs and the Effect on the Retirement Age
Is there really a normal retirement age?• Labour legislation doesn’t stipulate a retirement age• No one may be unfairly discriminated against because of their age (Section 187 Labour Relations Act)• General understanding that the "normal" retirement age is 55, 60 or 65• (section 187 (2)(b))• Employer and employee must agree on a retirement age
• Employment contract • A company norm (Pension or Provident Fund Rules)• Company policy.
Meeting Customer’s Retirement Needs and the Effect on the Retirement Age
Is there really a normal retirement age? • Many surveys - vast majority of retirees will be well short of their needs• Later retirement can add significant financial benefits • New pressures – Longevity, investment performance, later entry etc. • Social considerations – Youth unemployment (40%) transformation
So how should the needs of members, employers and society be balanced?
Meeting Customers’ Retirement Needs and the Effect on Retirement Age
“I actually think the whole concept of retirement is a bit stupid, so yes, I do want to do something else. There is this strange thing that just because chronologically on a Friday night you have reached a certain age... with all that experience, how can it be that on a Monday morning, you are useless?”Stuart Rose
The “right” retirement age?
• Depends on your perspective:– Governments– Individuals– Companies
Governments
• Ratio of working to non-working population important for economic growth
• Cost of old age benefits• Older workers making way for younger?• Demographic dividend
Old-age dependency ratios
Source: Economist
Old-age dependency ratios
Source: World Bank
Companies
Reasons to keep it low Reasons to push it outEmployee pressure Better retirement outcomesGroup life costs LongevityOlder employees generally costlier Retention of experienceMaking way for new blood Knowledge workers - healthy
employeesManual labourers – health of workers
Predominantly female workforce
Choosing NRA for a retirement fund
Individuals
Lifetime income
The longevity challenge for individuals
The longevity challenge for individuals
A radical thought for retirement funds
• Youngsters (20-30) – no retirement fund membership
• Middle aged (30-45) – focus more on risk cover
• Older ages (45-NRA) – maximise retirement savings
A radical thought for retirement funds
• Some considerations– Addresses lifetime income challenges– Younger members don’t preserve anyway– Save on admin of youngsters with short tenure– Behavioural challenges – get into habit of not saving …
difficulty introducing later– Everyone’s unique – options– Tax – maximum tax deductible contributions