Abstract
Dutch policy makers recently set the public debate on ageing alight by enforcing drastic cuts in early
retirement opportunities; increasing taxation of the aged and augmenting retirement age are also
considered.
The prime argument is to diminish a burden on public finances far in future. This paper argues that
this argument ignores, first, that on a cohort basis ageing is a very limited problem and, therefore,
also the financing of future occupational pensions based on capital funding. Second, data taken from
the Income Panel Survey show that the financing of the basic pay-as-you-go state pension AOW
over the coming decades is not a major problem that could not be solved by the future increase in
employment participation which may plausibly be expected.
Because of its strong focus on public finance Dutch policymaking also ignores important inequalities
in the ageing process as well as important cost disadvantages of private pension funding in
comparison with collective schemes - two aspects which, by contrast, are central to the UK pension
debate. The first inequality concerns the risk of increased poverty among retired women that may
result from the changes made in the occupational pension system and occur because of low lifetime
earnings from the massive part-time employment; the phenomenon should be discussed and
prevented. Second, the life expectancy of the low educated is significantly shorter than that of the
better educated. In the case of a uniform pension age this induces the risk of a transfer of pension
savings from the former to the latter, from the less to the better paid; this should be accounted for
when discussing augmenting the pension age.