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Cato Scholar Tells Congress Chilean System Offers Model for Reform
August 6, 2001
Chile's experiment with Social Security privatization has been a
tremendous success and could serve as a model for Social Security reform
in this country, according to L. Jacobo Rodríguez, assistant director of the
Cato Project on Global Economic Liberty, in testimony before the
Subcommittee on Social Security of the House Committee on Ways and
Means.
In 1981 Chile replaced its bankrupt pay-as-you-go retirement system
with a fully funded system of individual retirement accounts managed by
the private sector, a solution that "defused the fiscal time bomb" caused
when "fewer and fewer workers have to pay for the retirement benefits of
more and more retirees," said Rodríguez -- a situation that many countries
face, including the United States. As a result of the reform, "workers are
retiring with better, more secure pensions and, increasingly, at an early
age," he said.
"Through their pension accounts, Chilean workers have become
owners of the means of production in Chile and, consequently, have grown
much more attached to the free market and to a free society," Rodríguez
noted. "This has had the effect of reducing class conflicts, which in turn has
promoted political stability and helped to depoliticize the Chilean economy.
Pensions today do not depend on the government's ability to tax future
generations of workers, nor are they a source of election-time
demagoguery. To the contrary, pensions depend on a worker's own efforts
and thereby afford workers satisfaction and dignity."
Chile's reforms have proven so successful that "the Chilean system
has clearly become the point of reference for countries interested in finding an enduring solution to the problem of paying for the retirement benefits of
aging populations," Rodríguez said.
While critics cite high administrative costs, lack of portfolio choice
and high transfer rates between funds, Rodríguez argues that those
criticisms are either misinformed (as in the case of administrative costs,
which are only one percent of assets) or the result of "excessive government
regulation." With some liberalization, "we should expect Chile's private
pension system to be even more successful," he said. "And unlike a pay-as-you-
go system, a fully funded individual capitalization system can
anticipate fewer problems as it matures."
Rodríguez's testimony can be found on the Cato Web site at www.cato.org/testimony/ct-jr073101.html.
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