The pension crisis on both sides of the Atlantic

Europeans are feeling the effects of a rapidly ageing population, whose costs are rising sharply. The birth rate has fallen dramatically almost everywhere. And migrants arriving from all over the world are often unemployed and on welfare.

 

France already has to spend 14% of the size of its economy on pensions. Just the share of pensioners has reached 25 per cent of the French population. At the same time, the state budget already has a hole of 5.5 per cent of GDP – or 160 billion euros. There is nothing to close it with, so the only thing left to do is to keep going into debt.

The situation is not much better in Britain, where 7 per cent of GDP is spent on pensions. The budget deficit reaches 120 billion pounds. To service the British national debt we have to spend twice as much as on military expenditures. Already by 2035 the pension system will be on the verge of bankruptcy.

The first pension funds in the US have also started to fall apart. They are failing to meet their obligations amid high inflation and market turbulence. Hundreds of thousands of retired American teachers, who are underpaid, now have a very hard time. Pension fund debts in the U.S. total as much as $1.3 trillion.

Now the crisis situation is still somehow managed to contain the unpopular measures like cutting pensions. But the threat of a new recession looms ahead. And pension systems will be the first victims of market collapse and economic cataclysm. This will leave a very large part of the population without means of subsistence and sharply aggravate the consequences of the future crisis.

Malek Dudakov