Skip to main content

Payroll

United States Climbs to 16th in Global Retirement Index

The U.S., like virtually every other developed country, is now facing the challenges of a growing old-age dependency ratio and a widening gap in economic opportunity between the “haves” and “have nots.” Rising healthcare costs present yet another ...

retirement 1 1  553fa10a14ad7

The United States nudged up one spot to No. 16 among 43 countries in the 2018 Global Retirement Index, released today by Natixis Investment Managers. The modest rise in the US ranking is attributed to improving economic conditions and financial institutional strength. However, 10 years after the global financial crisis, Natixis points to a confluence of factors – ultra-low interest rates, growing levels of public debt, aging populations and human longevity – as indicators for the ongoing sustainability of retirement systems in the US and around the world.

“Global retirement security is facing a multi-dimensional problem, as the traditional three-pillar funding model is challenged by 21st Century demographics, fiscal imbalances and monetary policies that are straining the resources of individuals, employers and governments around the world,” said Jean Raby, CEO at Natixis Investment Managers. “We hope this report will serve as a framework for much-needed dialogue among policymakers, pension managers, workers and the financial industry about how to meet the needs of today’s retirees while preserving retirement security for future generations.”

Now in its sixth year, the Global Retirement Index provides a snapshot of 43 countries and their relative score on key measures that influence retirement security. An overall score for each country is based on an examination of 18 factors across four broad categories: Finances in Retirement, Material Wellbeing, Quality of Life and Health.

The best performers

  • Western Europe continues to dominate the top 10 countries in the 2018 index, including Switzerland (No. 1), Iceland (No. 2), Norway (No. 3), Sweden (No. 4), Denmark (No. 8) and the Netherlands (No. 10). New Zealand (No. 5) and Australia (No. 6) maintain their positions in the top 10.
  • Ireland enters the top 10 for the first time, climbing from 14th last year to 7th which is the largest jump in both rankings and score of all countries. Ireland’s ability to cut its unemployment rate to 6.2% as of 2017, and subsequently reduce income inequality, contributed to its rise in the index. It also boasts a significant improvement in tax pressure, and thus an increase in the level of disposable income of retirees.
  • Canada returned to the top 10 (No. 9) mainly as a result of improvements in the biodiversity, air quality and environmental factors indicators within the Quality of Life sub-index. It has the second-highest air quality and seventh-highest personal happiness scores in the entire Index. In the Material Wellbeing category, Canada’s unemployment indicator improved as the country benefited from a stronger jobs market in 2017.

“This year the countries in the top 10 all benefit from three strong main factors: their social programs, widely accessible healthcare and low levels of income inequality,” said Ed Farrington, Executive Vice President of Retirement Strategies at Natixis Investment Managers. “That said, none of the countries are entirely immune to the challenges that are associated with an aging population, strained government resources and a pension crisis. Today’s stakeholders need to reevaluate old assumptions so that we can ensure individuals can live securely in the years following their retirement.”

Global financial crisis accelerates a retirement crisis

The Natixis report, “Protecting the Promise: Five critical threats to global retirement security,” provides a backdrop for the 2018 Index. According to the analysis, which examines retirement challenges through a post-crisis lens, the unintended consequences of monetary policy moves playing out over the past decade have put retirement security further from reach, making savings more expensive, stifling employment and wage growth, and all but eliminating the yield retirees were counting on from bond staples. The prolonged period of suppressed interest rates left both pensioners and pension managers in the lurch. Retirees have had to moderate income expectations in line with low interest rates or take on significantly higher levels of risk with their retirement savings just to stay even.

The US, like virtually every other developed country, is now facing the challenges of a growing old-age dependency ratio and a widening gap in economic opportunity between the “haves” and “have nots.” Rising healthcare costs present yet another quality-of-life challenge to retirement security.

Factors driving US GRI ranking

Several factors affected the US position in this year’s index:

  • Strength of financial institutions: The US continues to rank in the top 10 for finances, largely due to improvements in tax pressure, fewer non-performing bank loans and rising interest rates, which improve saving levels and income in retirement. However, the old-age dependency ratio – which measures the burden placed on workers to provide pension, health care, and social security benefits to retirees – has been climbing steadily due to the surge of retiring Baby Boomers, straining government resources such as Social Security. According to the US Census Bureau, as the population ages, the ratio of older adults to working-age adults is projected to rise. By 2020, there will be about three-and-a-half working-age adults for every retirement-age person. By 2060, that ratio will fall to just two-and-a-half working-age adults for every retirement-age person.[1]
  • More jobs, but unbalanced economic opportunity persists: Improvements in the job market helped the US advance its score for the Material Wellbeing category. It also registered a slight improvement in the income equality gap compared to last year, but the US still has the seventh-worst score for this indicator, despite having the fifth-highest income per capita of all countries in the index. The results imply an ongoing challenge that lower-income Americans may be struggling to save for retirement.
  • Environmental risks: The US improved its performance for air quality and for environmental factors, but the latter indicator could use improvement, with the seventh-lowest score among all countries. It lagged last year’s score for protection of its ecosystem (e.g. flood control and soil renewal), and its happiness indicator score, which evaluates the quality of retirees’ current lives, also declined.
  • Health expenditures and ROI: The US maintained its position in the top 10 for the health category, in part because it spends more per capita on healthcare than any other country in the index, but the US dropped to No. 10 from No. 7 due to further decline in its life expectancy score, suggesting its health expenditures may not be yielding the same return on investment.

[1] United States Census Bureau’s 2017 National Population Projections, https://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2018/cb18-41-population-projections.html