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Posts Tagged ‘World Bank’
Friday, May 22nd, 2009
Retirement no joy for most because of paltry pensions
Yuliya Popova, Kyiv Post Staff Writer
An average monthlypension of $100 might be enough tosurvive on, but certainly not enough to live well on.
Unlike their peers in most European countries, Ukrainian pensioners are too poor to enjoy retirement.
The MacDonalds of Scotland and the Zhornyaks of Ukraine are two retired couples. Both sets are highly educated, hard-working and looking forward to summer. But they lead vastly different lifestyles because of the retirement benefits each country offers.
While the MacDonalds hope for sunny weather so they can make a trip abroad and attend jazz festivals, the Zhornyaks want enough rain to produce a big harvest on their land plot. They will need the food to survive the winter.
Retirement is one of the many huge divides still separating richer Western nations from poorer Ukraine.
It’s not that Ukraine doesn’t spend a large share of its national wealth on pensioners, though. To the contrary, the nation spends a greater share of its gross domestic product than most nations. The problem is that the money just doesn’t amount to much. Moreover, a steady demographic decline is creating an even more onerous burden on working taxpayers just to maintain the tattered social safety net that exists.
The consequence is that retirement, considered part of a person’s “golden years” in more affluent nations, is a hardship for many of Ukraine’s 14 million pensioners, almost a third of the nation’s population. With average monthly pensions of roughly $100, they can afford only basic food and medicine.
“Before retirement, we lived like humans. We were able to afford summer holidays and pretty much anything we wanted,” said Nadia Zhornyak, 63, who worked as an engineer in central Ukraine’s Cherkasy. “But now we are beggars relying on potatoes and cabbage from the dacha.”
The MacDonalds, by contrast, relish retirement.
“My pension, combined with that of my wife’s, is adequate for our needs and is sufficient to allow some foreign travel. But we have to be careful how we spend it,” said James MacDonald, 73, who taught geology. The family’s income – combining various pensions and investments – is “more like 70 percent of my final wages,” MacDonald said.
In Ukraine, the Zhornyaks rely primarily on a state pension because they have little in the way of private savings or investments. They have enough to pay for one week of food and the monthly bills for their subsidized electricity, water, gas and heating.
But even these paltry sums may be endangered. The recession is biting hard at Ukraine’s economy and, in turn, budget and pension fund receipts. President Victor Yushchenko sounded the alarm bells in April, warning of a potential Hr 10 billion deficit in the Ukraine’s annual Hr 164 billion pension fund. In an attempt to keep citizens calm, Labor Minister Ludmyla Denysova insisted that there’s enough money to pay everyone in full and on time.
But independent experts side with the president’s bleaker assessment. Ludmyla Kotusenko, of the Case Ukraine Center of Socio-Economic Research, projected an Hr 8 billion “hole” in the pension fund this year.
The Zhornyaks get their monthly $200 on time for now. But as employment and wages are cut across Ukraine, and with as much as half of the economy off the legal radar, economists say the pension system is in deep trouble. The demographic trends – a shrinking and aging population – exacerbate the financial situation. “Each worker has to support one pensioner,” Kotusenko said. “And with the growing number of elderly, it will get worse.”
The result, as the International Monetary Fund has pointed out, is that benefits will most likely have to be cut or revenues increased, or a combination of both.
Pension fund expenditures will this year increase from 15 to 16.5 percent of GDP, among highest in the world, according to Ceyla Pazarbasioglu, the head of the IMF mission in Ukraine. But revenues add up to only 11 percent of GDP, leaving a deficit that is covered by the state’s general fund revenues, Pazarbasioglu noted.
“In this context, the IMF recommended measures to avoid a further deterioration of the finances of the pension fund,” she said. Pazarbasioglu said that, over the past three years, the average pension has increased by 140 percent, more than the rate of inflation.
“Pensions were growing faster than average salaries and the economy, which led to a huge deficit during the crisis,” said portfolio manager Alexander Tulko from Troika Dialog Ukraine.
Operating on the pay-as-you-go principle, employers contribute 33 percent of the total wage pool to the pension fund. The remainder comes directly from the state and compulsory 2 percent contributions from individual salaries. “However, this is a road to nowhere, because this money is used to finance only existing pensioners, and you don’t know what your situation will be like in 20-25 years from now,” Tulko said.
Besides having economies flusher than Ukraine’s, many European countries also give people a greater range of private investment options with their mandatory deductions. Many private companies in these nations also offer private pensions to their workers.
The financial turmoil, however, has drastically cut investment returns on private funds. The MacDonalds said that many retirees in Scotland “are faced with a much less comfortable existence in retirement than they had anticipated – no new car, fewer or no foreign holidays, difficulty in finding buyers for their large houses if they want to move to smaller ones, etc.”
But private, company-sponsored pension funds and individual private investment portofolios are rarities in Ukraine.
Improvements in Ukraine’s state pension system – either from the point of view of beneficiaries or the state – are not expected anytime soon because of politics. Ukraine’s next presidential election is likely in January.
Analysts at the International Center for Policy Studies explain that the state can’t afford to let people divert some of their state-fund contributions to private investments – not if government wants to keep pensioners such as the Zhornyaks from slipping more deeply into poverty. “Obviously, no one will dare institute [the reform] in 2009 or even in 2010, while attempts to introduce it later will stumble on worsening demographic trends,” analysts said in their pension system overview in December.
The IMF and World Bank have suggested that Ukraine might want to increase its retirement age. Ukrainian women currently are pension-eligible at 55 and men at 60, while most Europeans leave work at 60 and 65, respectively.
Tymoshenko dismissed the change out of hand, noting Ukrainians’ shorter life expectancies. According to the World Health Organization, Ukrainian men can expect to live to 61 years and women to 74.
Some demographers disagree. “It’s a common delusion,” said health expert Olena Paliy of the Kyiv-based Institute of Demography, who favors raising the retirement age as part of the solution. “Life expectancy at birth is sensitive to the rate of deaths in the early years of life. Those who reached 60 are expected to live another 14 years.”
Meanwhile, in Scotland, the MacDonalds write books, play in a jazz band and plan their next foreign trip while the Zhornyaks of Ukraine will be getting their hands dirty growing their own food – putting their faith in the land, rather than the state.
(from the Kyiv Post)
Tags: Alexander Tulko, Anton Olff, Case Ukraine Center of Socio-Economic Research, Center for Policy Studies, Ceyla Pazarbasioglu, demographic trends, employment, Europe, food and medicine, inflation, International Monetary Fund, Kyiv Post, life expectancy, Ludmyla Kotusenko, MBS. Ltd. Yuliya Popova, pay-as-you-go, pensions, President Victor Yuschenko, private pensions, recession, retirement, social safety net, subsidized electricity, Troika Dialog Ukraine, ukraine, wages, World Bank, World Health Organization, Yuliya Tymoshenko Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Wednesday, April 8th, 2009
It looks like the idea of non-alignment is gaining some traction amongst some of Ukraine’s politicians. As we at MBS have advocated previously, it remains one of the best options as it would allow Ukraine to “leap-frog” over other Eastern European nations in terms of development. It would also force Ukraine to reform at a quicker pace as well as decrease security related tensions in the region.
“Ukraine should be a non-aligned state,” according to Volodymyr Lytvyn, the speaker of the Verkhovna Rada, Ukraine’s parliament.
“We must be a non-aligned state. We have to learn to live independently,” he said at a meeting with citizens of the town of Hadiach in Poltava region on Tuesday.
According to the head of the parliament, the question of whether Ukraine should join NATO or not NATO could be a source of conflict in the country.
The position of the people must be taken into account, and most of them oppose Ukraine’s joining NATO, Lytvyn added.
At the same time, he noted that the question on Ukraine’s joining the North Atlantic alliance is not a primary issue now.
(from Interfax)
The World Bank has also revised their economic outlook for Ukraine…and it is not very positive.
“Ukraine’s faltering economy will plunge into a deep recession and shrink by 9 percent this year, far worse than previously expected, according to the World Bank”
After nearly a decade of robust growth, the economy is being hit hard by the deterioration of the global economy and the national government’s failure to implement anti-crisis measures, the Bank said in a statement.
Inflation will hit 16.4 percent this year, better than last year’s 22.3 percent but still very high.
In December, the Bank had forecast that Ukraine’s economy would shrink by 4 percent and projected inflation at 13.6 percent. The International Monetary Fund expects the economy to contract by at least 6 percent this year.
Those estimates contradict sharply with government expectations of 0.4 percent growth and 9.5 inflation this year, which many analysts dismiss as unrealistic.
Ukraine’s economic crisis is one of the worst in Europe. Industrial output slumped by 32 percent in January and February compared with a year ago, and output in the construction industry dropped by 57 percent during that period, according to the World Bank.
The national currency, the hryvna, has lost about 40 percent of its value to the dollar since the crisis hit last fall.
Furthermore, constant political turmoil has worsened the effect of the global crisis on Ukraine by stalling the implementation of key anti-crisis policies.
The IMF withheld the second tranche of an emergency $16.4 billion loan this year after the government failed to trim spending and adopt other stabilization measures.
(from AP)
Tags: Anton Olff, Eastern Europe, MBS, mediterranean black sea, NATO, neutrality, President Viktor Yushchenko, Rada, Russia, tymochen, tymochenko, ukraine, World Bank Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Friday, March 6th, 2009
The writing is on the wall for Ukraine. Fortunately, France heard the cry and decided to help bail out Kyiv. This is the easy part. The hard part is cutting the budget deficit and further structural reforms — mostly privatization of state assets. Selling the last big government telecomm won’t be enough to save the day. The moratorium on selling agricultural land to foreign interests must be lifted.
(more…)
Tags: deficit, France, IMF, joel bucher, Kyiv, reform, tymochenko, ukraine, World Bank Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Wednesday, December 10th, 2008
If only I had the crystal ball the World Bank seems to have for telling us the obvious. Once again, the Financial Times (www.ft.com) delivers the timely news to those of us watching and waiting to decide where to put our hard earned kopecks.
Looks like commodities will not be the ticket to riches that I had supposed….if I follow the World Bank. Of course, this won’t be good news for our Russian friends, but I wouldn’t sell the Bentley just yet. I have a feeling that some of Wall Street gurus like Jim Rogers…who lives in Asia now…may be right about this being a dip before commodities resume their rise to the sky. Just think of all those governments and central banks…including mine in the United States…that will need to inflate to pay for all that stimulus, debt, bailouts and universal health care.
The bottom line is that commodities-like equities and real estate- experienced a boom due to real demand as well as unreal interest rates, cheap money, and lots of speculation. The flip side is that hard assets will make a comeback-though maybe not to the stratosphere-but will post solid gains in the inflationary environment that we could see within the next several years.
Global demand for oil to plummet
By Javier Blas in London and Krishna Guha in Washington
Published: December 9 2008 20:09 | Last updated: December 9 2008 20:09
Global oil demand will collapse next year and commodities will not return to the highs they reached this summer in the foreseeable future, two authoritative reports said on Tuesday as they forecast a long and painful worldwide recession.
The stark conclusions came as the World Bank’s chief economist predicted that the world faced “the worst recession since the Great Depression”.
The US energy department said global oil demand will fall this year and next, marking the first two consecutive years’ decline in 30 years.
“The increasing likelihood of a prolonged global economic downturn continues to dominate market perceptions, putting downward pressure on oil prices,” it said, forecasting that demand would drop 50,000 barrels a day this year and a hefty 450,000 b/d in 2009. US oil demand will drop next year to the lowest level in 11 years.
Meanwhile, the World Bank’s Global Economic Prospects report said the commodities boom of the past five years – which drove up prices 130 per cent – had “come to an end”.
The World Bank’s analysis of the commodities boom contrasts with the prevalent view among natural resources companies – and most Wall Street analysts – that the ongoing price drop is a correction within an upward trend.
Although it ruled out a return to the torrid high prices of this summer, it said commodities prices would not fall back to the depressed levels of the 1990s.
Oil would return to about $75 a barrel within the next three years, it said, while food would trade 60 per cent higher than in 2003, but about half below this year’s record.
“Over the longer run, the price of extracted commodities should fall,” the bank said, adding that because of slower population and income growth, world demand for raw materials will ease.
Andrew Burns, the leading author of the report, dismissed the idea – widely supported among the industry and international bodies such as the International Energy Agency – that the credit crunch could result in higher prices when the economy recovers as companies cancel supply expansion projects.
The bank forecast that world trade – an engine of growth for many developing countries – would contract for the first time since 1982.
Justin Lin, the World Bank’s chief economist, said the current downturn was likely to see simultaneous recessions in most of the industrialised world, and that these recessions were likely to last longer than in the early 1980s, and the decline in growth would be more universal than in past episodes in recent decades.
Technorati Tags: World Bank, Anton Olff, Justin Lin, Andrew Burns, International Energy Agency, credit crunch, recession, the Great Depression, U.S. Energy Department, cheap money, interest rates, speculation, inflation, hard assets, Financial Times, central banks, global demand, Javier Blas, Krishna Guha, London, Washington, , debt, stimulus, bailouts, universal health care, www.ft.com, commodities, Bentley, Russia, Jim Rogers, Wall Street,
Tags: Andrew Burns, Anton Olff, bailouts, Bentley, central banks, cheap money, commodities, credit crunch, debt, Financial Times, global demand, hard assets, inflation, interest rates, International Energy Agency, Javier Blas, Jim Rogers, Justin Lin, Krishna Guha, London, recession, Russia, speculation, stimulus, the Great Depression, U.S. Energy Department, universal health care, Wall Street, Washington, World Bank, www.ft.com Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Monday, December 8th, 2008
One of the side effects of the Global Economic Crisis-and we have to come up with a new name for this “crisis,” is the steep falloff in the amount of money sent home by immigrants and workers abroad. Many emerging market economies depend on this income to sustain themselves. The fallout from the falloff could be huge…..
| Falling remittances to hit CIS |
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Clare Nuttall in Almaty December 8, 2008
As the world’s rich economies sink into recession, the flow of remittances into developing countries is expected to see a corresponding decrease. In the CIS countries that rely heavily on payments from migrant workers abroad, the effect could be highly damaging. The construction and consumer-related sectors are expected to be particularly badly hit.
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) forecasts a drop of 6% in remittance payments to developing countries from their nationals working abroad in 2009. CIS countries are among the largest recipients of remittance payments measured in comparison to their GDP.
The Remittances Factbook 2008, published by the World Bank, finds that Tajikistan and Moldova are tied as the top remittance receiving countries – remittance inflows amount to 36% of their GDP. One NGO worker in Tajikistan reports seeing a jet leave from Dushanbe every week to Moscow, with 500 young men on board, while observers of the Moldovan market joke that “will the last Moldovan left please turn off the light.” Other CIS countries are also high on the list: Kyrgyzstan was in 4th place, with transfers from migrants equal to 27% of its GDP; in Armenia the figure is 18%. Only Russia and Kazakhstan have net outflows of money.
Speaking at the World Bank/IMF annual meeting recently, Shigeo Katsu, World Bank vice president for Europe and Central Asia, warned: “This money sent back home is second only to foreign direct investment as a source of external finance across the region, and is the largest source of external finance for a number of low income and lower middle income countries.”
Laid low
There are already signs the flow of money into the CIS’ poorer economies is tailing off as the US and West European economies suffer from the second wave of the credit crisis, while the previously strong growth in Russia and Kazakhstan dissipates – forecasts for 2009 are 3% and 2.7-4.1% respectively.
Reliable data on the situation in Central Asia is hard to come by, but anecdotal evidence suggests that migrant workers from Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan were the first to be laid off when work slowed or stopped at Kazakhstan’s construction sites. In Moscow and other Russian cities, many sites are also staffed by workers from other CIS countries. As in Kazakhstan, the Russian government has recently announced it will take measures to shore up the struggling construction sector.
A slowing of growth in the Russian economy is likely to be particularly damaging to Armenia, where 70% of remittances are sent from Russia; the amount is closely correlated with Russian GDP. Meanwhile, Moldova has seen many migrants return home in recent months, according to Matthias Lücke, senior economist at the Kiel Institute and head of the institute’s project on migrant remittances in CIS countries. “Based on the available statistics, the number of migrants is now lower than a year ago, by one fifth,” says Matthias Lücke, though he points out that there has not yet been a decline in remittances, according to available data.
The Kyrgyz government has already sounded the alarm. Economy Minister Akylbek Japarov warned in November that the international crisis could tip the country into financial collapse. He forecast that both FDI and remittances to the country would fall steeply in 2009, with a damaging effect on the already struggling. “Our government is in real terms on the threshold of a financial crisis. A decline in Kyrgyzstan’s economic situation is quite possible by February or March 2009,” Japarov said in a televised address.
Aside from consumption, the sector that has benefited the most from remittance inflows is real estate. Poor business environments and under-developed stock markets mean there are few alternatives to investing in real estate - aside from saving abroad or keeping their money under the mattress. As a result, the housing sectors in most of these countries have boomed lately, out of proportion to continuing low wage levels.
“What do migrants do with their money? The business climate in Moldova is so awful that unless you are well connected, you can’t invest it in the country since everyone will be demanding payoffs,” says Lücke. “The options are to renovate your house, to keep it under the mattress or to save it abroad in preparation for when you emigrate permanently. People are also buying real estate in the capital – there is a real property bubble for apartments in Chisinau.” The cost of an apartment in Chisinau increased on average by 5.5% in September 2008, and new buildings are still going up – the city mayor recently unveiled the Malldova shopping centre and at one upscale estate, developers are throwing in a free car with each house bought.
Real estate prices in both Bishkek and Dushanbe have increased rapidly in recent years. In Armenia, where money transfers are highly correlated to real estate prices, according to the IMF the construction sector overtook industrial production this year to become the largest sector of the economy, accounting for 23.2% of GDP. But just as this happened, the trend started to reverse. After seven years of continuous growth in real estate prices, a slight fall was recorded in 2008, said government agency State Real Property Cadastre. Prices in central Yerevan have fallen by an average of 3%, while in the rest of the country they are down by an average of 1.5%. There was also an 11% year-on-year decrease in the number of property deals registered from August through September. A similar story can be expected in other economies highly reliant on remittances.
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Technorati Tags: Global Economic Crisis, State Real Property Cadastre, Bishkek, Chisnau, Kyrgyz Republic, Akylbek Japarov, Armenia, Matthias Luke, Kiel Institute, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, construction, Russian government, Anton Olff, external finance, Russia, United States, Western Europe, Dushanbe, World Bank, IMF, Shigeo Katsu, Tajikistan, Moldova, NGO, CIS countries, recession, Clare Nuttall, Almaty, Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD), remittance payments, emerging markets,
Tags: Akylbek Japarov, Almaty, Anton Olff, Armenia, Bishkek, Chisnau, CIS countries, Clare Nuttall, construction, Dushanbe, emerging markets, external finance, Global Economic Crisis, IMF, Kazakhstan, Kiel Institute, Kyrgyz Republic, Matthias Luke, Moldova, NGO, Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD), recession, remittance payments, Russia, Russian government, Shigeo Katsu, State Real Property Cadastre, Tajikistan, United States, Uzbekistan, Western Europe, World Bank Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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