HomeNewsBusinessStocksFiscal burden of pension seen at 3.4-4.1% of GDP by 2030

Fiscal burden of pension seen at 3.4-4.1% of GDP by 2030

A CRISIL Research study shows that there are nearly 100 million people aged over 60 in India today, and that number will triple to 300 million by 2050. "Fiscal burden of pensions can be 3.4% to 4.1% of GDP by 2030", says CRISIL.

January 07, 2015 / 13:14 IST
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A CRISIL Research study shows that there are nearly 100 million people aged over 60 in India today, and that number will triple to 300 million by 2050. In other words, every fifth citizen will be a sexagenarian compared with every twelfth now. The worry is that most of them will be financially insecure in their sunset years if a social security net doesn’t get built starting right now. And if a large number of the old end up having no pension by 2030, the government will have to bear the heavy fiscal burden of providing minimum sustenance to them. A multifold increase in pension coverage to the private-sector workforce is therefore an imperative.

"With the focus on India’s demographic dividend, the fiscal cost of ageing is not at the forefront of discussion. However, unless addressed, this cost can be onerous in coming decades," says Roopa Kudva, Managing Director & CEO, CRISIL.

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Government employees joining after 2004 are covered under the defined contribution formula of the National Pension System; hence the government’s pension liability on account of these employees will decline to 0.7% of GDP by 2050 from 2.2% of GDP currently. The problem, however, lies in the private sector.

CRISIL Research has built a best-case scenario where pension coverage expands such that 70% of the private-sector retirees by 2030 (63 million) will get a pension compared with just 8% (4.8 million) now. Even if this happens, and the government has to provide pension to only 30% of the old, in addition to retired government employees by 2030, its pension bill will rise by 120 basis points to 3.4% of GDP by 2030 from around 2.2% currently, assuming each pensioner gets Rs. 2,000 every month.