KUALA LUMPUR: A study on
retirement trends in East Asia has revealed the increasing vulnerability of
Malaysians due to early retirement age as well as low rates of pension receipt
under the Employees’ Provident Fund and the lack of old-age poverty floor.
The study report, “Balancing
Tradition and Modernity: The Future of Retirement in East Asia”, is based on a
survey that the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) conducted
in Malaysia, China, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan, according to
Prudential in a statement on the survey findings.
The CSIS East Asia
Retirement Survey reveals that an astonishing 92 per cent of current retirees
in Malaysia report that they had already left the workforce by age 60 and
suggests that Malaysia’s pattern of premature retirement will likely persist.
Malaysia is the only country
in the survey whose fertility rate is above the 2.1 replacement level and the
only one that will have a growing population and workforce in the coming
decades, the report said.
“In China, the elderly share
of the population will be approaching 30 per cent by 2040 — and in Hong Kong,
Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan it will be approaching 40 per cent. In
Malaysia, it will still be under 20 per cent,” it said.
Malaysia’s early mandatory
retirement age, however, offsets its demographic advantage in building an
adequate and sustainable retirement system, it added.
Co-authored by Richard
Jackson and Neil Howe, it is part of the multilayer Global Ageing Preparedness
Project, which was launched by CSIS and British insurance giant Prudential plc
in 2010.
The survey found four out of
five of today’s retirees in Malaysia worry about “being poor and in need of
money,” becoming “a burden on their children,” and being “in ill health and
having no one to care for them” — much larger shares than in any of the other
survey countries.
Their vulnerability is
attributable to Malaysia’s unusually early retirement ages, which leaves
retirees at risk of outliving their savings, as well as to low rates of pension
receipt under the EPF and to the lack of an age-old poverty floor, the survey
said. — Bernama
Retirement prospects are
improving for the younger generations, who expect to be less dependent on the
extended family than today’s retirees are and to rely more heavily on their own
savings, it said.
But with one in five current
workers still expecting to receive no pension benefits of any kind, the outlook
for many is far from secure, it added.
Donald Kanak, Chairman of
Prudential Corporation Asia, which is part of Prudential plc, said: “Responding
to the challenges caused by an ageing population is critical to Asia’s future.
“It is critical that policy
makers and the industry work together to address this vital question.”
Charlie Oropeza, Chief
Executive Officer of Prudential Assurance Malaysia Bhd, said: “The findings of
the CSIS Study reinforce the need for Malaysians to better plan and secure
their financial position towards retirement.
“While the policymakers as
well as the Malaysian Government have been introducing frameworks such as the
Financial Blueprint to provide greater length and breadth of financial products
and services, Malaysians need to be more aware and make themselves financially
ready through prudent investment decisions. (Bernama)
No comments:
Post a Comment