Agency Predicts ‘$224 Trillion Retirement Gap’ (Seriously)

401k, pensions, retirement, deficit, World Economic Forum

WEF sees serious retirement storm clouds on the horizon. Is it accurate or alarmist?

Human sacrifice, dogs and cats living together—mass hysteria.

Not to be flip about the World Economic Forum’s prediction of coming retirement funding shortfalls, but the eye-popping $224 trillion deficit by 2050 in the world’s largest pension systems requires a bit of gallows humor.

The obvious inference is that demographic changes in longevity mean defined benefits can no longer get it done, and it makes the case (again) for 401k-style defined contribution plans.

It will imperil “the incomes of future generations and setting the industrialized world up for the biggest pension crisis in history,” the WEF reports warns.

“The anticipated increase in longevity and resulting aging populations is the financial equivalent of climate change,” Michael Drexler, head of Financial and Infrastructure Systems at the World Economic Forum, said in a statement. “We must address it now or accept that its adverse consequences will haunt future generations, putting an impossible strain on our children and grandchildren.”

The report is the latest study to calculate the impact of aging populations on the pension gap in the world’s six largest markets, which include the United States, United Kingdom, Japan, Netherlands, Canada and Australia.

The gap is the largest in the U.S., where a current shortfall of $28 trillion is projected to rise to $137 trillion in 2050.

The average gap in the six markets combined is calculated to reach $300,000 per person. The total gap for all eight markets in the study (which further includes China and India, which have the world’s largest populations) will reach a total of $400 trillion by 2050.

The report highlights five high “priority actions” that governments and policy-makers should take to adapt pension systems to address the challenges:

The report also emphasizes that “governments and policy-makers have a central role to play in reforming pension systems to ensure we can adapt to societies where living to 100 is commonplace.”

“Because retirement outcomes unfold slowly over decades, emerging problems are very hard to see and are virtually unchangeable once they occur,” added Robert Prince, co-chief investment officer of Bridgewater Associates and part of the World Economic Forum’s Retirement Investment Systems Reform Project Steering Committee. “Good outcomes require effective approaches and good decisions applied consistently over decades.”

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