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The Korea Herald
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THE INVESTOR
March 19, 2024

Market Now

Experts from Korea, Finland discuss future of pensions

  • PUBLISHED :October 08, 2021 - 14:36
  • UPDATED :October 08, 2021 - 14:36
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Korean Pension Association President Yun Suk-myung speaks during a seminar co-organized with the Finnish Center for Pensions, titled “International Symposium on the Pensions of South Korea and Finland: Demographic Challenges and Future Responses,” Thursday, at the Federation of Korean Industries’ headquarters in Seoul. (KPA)

The Korean Pension Association, a group of experts conducting research on the nation’s public and private pension systems, held a joint seminar on October 7 with the Finnish Center for Pensions. The Helsinki-based research institute is dedicated to developing the European nation’s earnings-related pension plan.

Titled “International Symposium on the Pensions of South Korea and Finland: Demographic Challenges and Future Responses,” the event was aimed at providing expert knowledge and insights on how to reform public and private pension systems in response to demographic changes.

“In both Finland and Korea, life expectancy has been increasing at a rapid rate, while the fertility rate -- the average number of children each woman is expected to give birth to over her lifetime -- continued to fall,” said KPA President Yun Suk-myung.

“However, Finland managed to keep its birth rate at 1.34, as of August. On the other hand, Korea continued to have low fertility rates for the last 20 years.”

Yun stressed the importance of people-to-people exchanges between the two countries to discuss measures to achieve long-term sustainability for the state pension fund in the wake of the fast-aging population.

South Korea’s total fertility rate per woman amounted to 1.1 in 2021, the lowest among all 198 countries surveyed and far lower than the global average of 2.4, according to the report from the UN Population Fund.

During the first session of the symposium, Mikko Kautto, managing director of the Finnish Center for Pensions, delivered a speech on the financial impact of Finland’s demographic structure on the nation’s pension systems.

“The demographic development poses serious questions on sustainability of public pensions and public finances in more general. The key purpose of pension systems is to protect older people from poverty and to allow them to enjoy decent living standards. But the necessary condition to carry out this task is to have financial sustainability in pension schemes,” he said.

Meanwhile, in the second session, market experts such as Cho Young-tae, a professor of public health sciences at Seoul National University, and Nam Jae-woo, a researcher at the Korea Capital Market Institute, briefed the group on how the government could develop alternative policies for Korea’s public and private pension systems.

By Choi Jae-hee (cjh@heraldcorp.com)























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