Introduction
Providing unpaid care to a child or to a family member with disability, a long-term illness or frailty due to old age carries a retirement income penalty. A person's pension entitlement, in most countries, is linked to workforce participation and lifetime earnings. People who provide care often have interrupted workforce histories, significantly lower retirement incomes and are at greater risk of poverty in old age. As women take on a greater proportion of caring responsibilities than men, they are more likely to have low incomes in old age (Vlachantoni, Reference Vlachantoni2012; ACEOWM, 2013). In almost all EU member states, women over sixty-five are on average poorer than men (Foster, Reference Foster2014).
Periods of absence from the workforce or reduced workforce participation due to caring responsibilities will have a direct impact on a carer's lifetime earnings and retirement incomes, but also creates opportunity costs for future labour market participation and career progression that further affect income in old age (AHRC, 2013b; OECD, 2015). Women's lower retirement income is also due to gender inequalities in pay (Vlachantoni, Reference Vlachantoni2012). Research suggests that people with caring responsibilities may be less well remunerated when they undertake paid work, with evidence of both motherhood and carer ‘pay penalties’ (Thomson et al., Reference Thomson, Hill, Griffiths and Bittman2008; AHRC, 2013b). Women's interrupted workforce participation and the gender pay gap affect their capacity to accumulate an adequate level of retirement savings. In some EU countries, more than a third of women have no pension entitlement at all, and among those who do, the value is on average 40 per cent lower than men's (ACEOWM, 2013; Bettio et al., Reference Bettio, Tinios and Betti2013).
In coming years, inequalities in old age created by care provision will become a more pressing issue (Vlachantoni, Reference Vlachantoni2012) as population ageing creates greater demand for unpaid care of ageing relatives (Pickard et al., Reference Pickard, Wittenberg, Comas-Herrera, Davies and Darton2000; Geerts et al., Reference Geerts, Willeme and Mot2012; Pickard, Reference Pickard2015) and global economic conditions place greater pressure on pension systems (Foster, Reference Foster2014). Over the last few decades, various policies and services to support carers have been developed and implemented across countries, in recognition of their contribution and of the long-term health, social and financial impacts of caring. These include national carers policy frameworks and strategies; processes to identify and assess carers’ needs; specific services designed to support carers, such as respite services; legislative mechanisms to reconcile caring and employment; and financial support (Colombo et al., Reference Colombo, Llena-Nozal, Mercier and Tjadens2011; Courtin et al., Reference Courtin, Jemiai and Mossialos2014).
In recognition of the retirement income penalty faced by people providing care, governments in many countries have introduced ‘carer credits’ into their public old age pension schemes. Carer credits are usually state-funded contributions that are made to a person's public pension while they are out of the workforce providing care. Over the last few decades, many governments have improved the value and coverage of their carer credits (Price, Reference Price2007; Fultz, Reference Fultz2011) (though the climate of fiscal austerity over the last few years has seen proposals to reduce their generosity (OECD, 2015)). While there is a long way to go in reducing the gender inequalities in public pension schemes around the world, and these measures will do little to improve the pensions of women already living on low pensions, these measures do go some way to ameliorating the disadvantage experienced by people providing care.
This progress in public schemes has taken place alongside a broader shift towards private provision in old age and, in particular, towards mandatory (or quasi-mandatoryFootnote 1 ) private pensions (Holzmann, Reference Holzmann2012; Ebbinghaus, Reference Ebbinghaus2015). Private pensions are contributory savings mechanisms that are (generally) fully funded, that is, individuals contribute throughout their working lives to their own savings account from which their pension is paid in later life. In 2013, contributions to private pensions were mandatory or quasi-mandatory in eighteen of thirty-four OECD countries (OECD, 2013), and in others contributions were voluntary but heavily encouraged through taxation concessions.
While carer credits in public schemes have loosened the link between lifetime contributions and income in old age, the shift towards private pensions has tightened this link. This undermines progress made in public schemes in compensating for time spent caring and widens inequalities in pension outcomes, particularly for carers with interrupted work histories (Behrendt, Reference Behrendt2000; Ginn, Reference Ginn2001; Ginn and MacIntyre, Reference Ginn and MacIntyre2013). If this shift continues, growing numbers of carers will reach old age with little to support themselves. Despite this, little policy attention has focused on measures within mandatory private pension schemes that may address some of the inequalities that they create. We urgently need to consider how to address the retirement income penalty that increasingly prominent mandatory private pension schemes place on carers.
One valuable suggestion here is to change the taxation treatment of private pensions so that it is more progressive, as the concessional taxation treatment of private pensions benefits high income earners and does little to augment the retirement savings of those with interrupted lifetime earnings (Hughes and Sinfield, Reference Hughes, Sinfield, Hughes and Stewart2004; Davidson, Reference Davidson2012). This would be an important move in closing the gap in retirement savings. But this method alone only has the potential to close the gap so far, and would do more to reduce the benefits enjoyed by higher income earners than to improve the retirement incomes of those providing care. As a result, some scholars, policymakers and advocacy organisations around the world have called for carer credits in mandatory private pension schemes (i.e. Olsberg, Reference Olsberg2004; AHRC, 2013a).
Drawing on a review of international scholarly literature and publicly available grey literature, this article provides the first policy review and conceptual analysis of the policy of carer credits in private pension schemes. The research sets out to identify existing models of carer credits in private pension schemes, focusing on mandatory or quasi-mandatory schemes, and to assess their design features, their advantages and their disadvantages. The authors found that examples of carer credits in private schemes are rare, and those that do exist are in their early stages, vary considerably in their principles and design features and are limited in the extent to which they are capable of addressing the inequalities experienced by people who provide care. Further, these examples have been introduced in the absence of comprehensive policy or scholarly debate about how we might understand, design and evaluate carer credits in private pension schemes.
In the first review of what governments around the world are doing in this policy space, this article presents examples of carer credits in private pension schemes that emerged from the review, before analysing their design features and areas of divergence and similarity, in search of an ‘exemplar’ model of carer credits in private pension schemes. Then drawing on lessons learned from credits in public pension schemes, a set of ideal design principles is presented. Finally, the article provides the first conceptual analysis of this policy approach, examining where it fits into the principles that underpin public and private retirement incomes systems around the world.
Background: pension architectures and closing the gender gap
This section sets out the basics of pension system design to provide a picture of where pension credits in private pension schemes, the key focus of the paper, fit into overall pension architectures. Most countries have a multi-tier pension system made up of a combination of public and private pension schemes. The OECD (2013) offers a taxonomy with three tier-types, or levels:Footnote 2
-
• First tier pensions: basic public social assistance-style pensions underpinned by the principles of poverty alleviation and redistribution, which are flat rate and often means tested.
-
• Second tier pensions: mandatory, contributory public or private savings mechanisms designed to produce some form of income replacement in older age. This tier is the most complex and includes both public social insurance schemes and mandatory (or quasi-mandatory) private savings schemes. Individuals accumulate savings based on their workforce participation, earnings or contributions throughout their life-course.
-
• Third tier: voluntary savings, often encouraged by government through incentives or concessions.
Most countries have some form of first and second tier public pension and voluntary private savings (third tier). A growing number also have second tier mandatory (or quasi-mandatory) contributions to private pensions. First tier schemes are not based on workforce participation or earnings and have flat-rate benefits that produce equitable outcomes for carers and non-carers. However, public and private second tier schemes, because of their link to workforce participation and earnings throughout the life course, produce a significant retirement income penalty for carers (Mohring, Reference Mohring2014).
In many countries, second tier contributory public pension schemes developed as the main component of their pension systems in the twentieth century (OECD, 2013). In response to the significant inequalities these schemes create for those with interrupted workforce histories, most governments in countries with second tier public schemes have introduced ‘carer credits’, which recognise time spent bearing and rearing children or caring for a family member with a disability or illness by crediting their public pension while they are out of the workforce providing care. Over the last twenty years, credits in public pensions have improved in both value and coverage.
The strengthening of carer credits in second tier public pension schemes has been accompanied by a shift towards private pension provision, and second tier private pension schemes are an increasingly important part of many countries’ retirement incomes arrangements. The shift towards second tier private pension schemes is part of a broader shift in international retirement incomes policy over the last few decades that has seen governments encourage individuals to provide for their own old age from private means. This trend has seen a greater emphasis on private pensions, often supported by generous taxation concessions, and a shift from defined benefit to defined contribution pension schemes, which moves the risk associated with retirement pension accumulation from employers to individuals (Foster, Reference Foster2014). Though second tier public pensions still form the main pillar of most countries’ pension schemes, private pensions are becoming an increasingly dominant part and this has prompted many scholars and policymakers to describe the international trend as the ‘privatisation’ of pensions (i.e. Orenstein, Reference Orenstein2008; Ebbinghaus, Reference Ebbinghaus2015).
Increasingly dominant private pension schemes, which are closely linked to income throughout the life-course, widen inequalities in pension outcomes, particularly for those outside of the workforce or in part-time work due to caring responsibilities (Samek Lodovici et al., Reference Samek Lodovici, Crepaldi, Corsi and Naaf2011; ACEOWM, 2013). The shift towards private pensions, therefore, is ‘sharpen[ing] the pension penalties women incur when they restrict their earning capacity in order to care for others’ (Ginn and Arber, Reference Ginn, Arber, Arber and Attias-Donfut2000: 149). The shift has also limited the redistributive potential of the state, by reducing the levers it has access to in ameliorating some of the disadvantage experienced by women and carers.
In recognition of the extent to which private pension schemes widen gender inequalities and fail to recognise periods spent caring, governments in several countries are developing mechanisms for crediting a person's private pension while they are out of the workforce providing care. While there is a considerable body of work examining credits in public pensions, little is known about what credits in private pensions might look like, and the principles and design features that might guide their development.
Method
In search of an ‘exemplar’ model of carer credits in private pension schemes, the authors conducted a review of international scholarly literature and international publicly available grey literature such as political and policy documents (published in English). The review emerged from of a large study conducted in 2012 and funded by the Australian Human Rights Commission that set out to explore better methods of recognising care in Australia's retirement incomes system. The review, which was updated in 2015, consisted of a search of academic literature through Proquest social sciences databases using keywords concerning credits (such as ‘carer credits’, ‘care credits’ and ‘pension credits’), broader terms concerning pension system design (such as ‘private pension/s’, ‘privatisation’ and ‘age pension/s’) and combining these in various ways with terms such as ‘gender’, ‘women’, ‘inequality/ies’, ‘care’ and ‘carer’. The review also included grey literature from the OECD, the European Union, various non-government organisations and single country governments where it was publicly available and in English. The papers included in the review (approximately forty in total) were therefore a mix of journal articles published in academic journals and discussion papers produced by government and non-government bodies. The discussion papers in most cases provided considerably more detail about the policy arrangements. We reviewed a substantial number of papers on public carer credits in search of discussion or analysis of private carer credits. Most, but not all, papers were focused on the gendered dynamics of contemporary pension arrangements/reform. Of the papers that specifically focused on carer credits, many were comparative in nature.
By carer credits in private pension schemes, we refer to allowances, subsidies or contributions made to private pensions to compensate for losses during periods spent caring. The review found no explicit discussion or analysis of this type of credit. Instead, details of credits in private pensions were often embedded in complex accounts of a country's pension system, and, once identified, the authors were required to delve deeper to ascertain the exact details of the measure. The authors excluded examples of private pension credits that were proposed by governments but not legislated, such as a measure currently being proposed by the Australian Liberal/National Coalition Government.
The review revealed very few examples of carer credits in private pension schemes. Before presenting a discussion of these examples, the next section will provide a detailed overview of existing pension credits in public pension schemes to reveal the design features of public pension credits and trends in the recognition of care provision in pension systems internationally. It presents this overview in some detail because, later in the article, lessons are drawn out for mandatory private pension credits based on what has been learnt from public pension credits.
Carer credits in second tier public pension schemes
Second tier, contributory public pension schemes can be flat rate or earnings-related. In flat-rate second tier public pension schemes, carer credits are usually in the form of years towards a contributions history. In earnings-related second tier public pension schemes, credits usually take the form of financial credits towards a pension account. In flat-rate schemes, a person's pension entitlement is based on the number of years that they have contributed to the social insurance scheme. To receive the full pension, they must have contributed to social insurance (and therefore participated in paid work) for a minimum number of years (AHRC, 2013b). In Britain's flat-rate pension, for example, this is called having a full contributions record. Individuals who have contributed for thirty (rising to thirty-five) or more years receive a full pension (OECD, 2015). Those with fewer years of contributions receive a lower rate of pension. People who take time out of paid work to provide unpaid care and therefore have fewer than thirty years of contributions receive a lower rate of pension in their old age. To reduce some of this disadvantage, for each year spent providing care, the government provides a one year ‘credit’ to their contribution record, or reduces by one year the required balance for a full contribution record, which increases their pension entitlement (AHRC, 2013b).Footnote 3
Carer credits can also be in the form of a financial credit to the person's pension account while they are providing care. In earnings-related second tier public pension schemes, the value of the financial credit is generally based on one of three methods: a proportion of earnings prior to leaving the workforce; a percentage of national average earnings; or a proportion of the national minimum wage (AHRC, 2013b).Footnote 4 In Luxembourg, for example, credits are calculated based on the person's earnings prior to leaving the workforce, whereas in France credits are flat-rate, provided to all parents at a proportion of the minimum wage (OECD, 2015). Other schemes, such as Britain's, combine a financial credit with a time-based one (AHRC, 2013b), although this has recently been replaced by a new public pension and accompanying system of carer credits. While there are a few exceptions, such as Denmark and Sweden (OECD, 2015), in most carer credit schemes, where a credit of financial value (rather than time) is made to an individual's pension balance, credits are made to notional accounts; that is, the credit is not a real contribution made to an individual pension account but rather a credit towards an individual's notional pension balance in an unfunded pay-as-you-go scheme (AHRC, 2013b).
In the case of carer credits for parents, the duration of the credit is based on the age of the child, providing credits to the pension account of the parent from the birth (or adoption) of the child until the child reaches a certain age (AHRC, 2013b). In some countries, such as Sweden, an individual is entitled to credits for the time that they are on paid parental leave and in countries such as Canada, Finland and Britain, entitlement to carer credits is ‘piggybacked’ onto receipt of a family payment or tax credit (Fultz, Reference Fultz2011). In most countries with credits for carers of people with disability or illness, credits are provided for as long as the carer is in receipt of a carer-based income support payment (e.g., Britain) or the care recipient is in receipt of a disability-based income support payment (e.g., Germany). Carer credits are often paid for through general taxation revenue (Jankowski, Reference Jankowski2011), but are occasionally shared with the individual and/or the employer (AHRC, 2013b). In sum, the structural features of carer credits in public pension schemes are set out in Table 1.
Improving carer credits in public pension schemes
In recognition that carer credits were not adequately compensating parents for periods spent caring for a young child and were not compensating informal carers for periods spent caring for someone with disability, a long term illness, or frailty due to old age, many governments have now improved the value and coverage of the carer credits in their second tier public pension schemes. The improvements include making credits more generous in value or duration and extending the credits to include more parents and carers. For example, countries with credits for ‘informal care’ now include Austria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Poland, Slovakia, Norway and Britain (Vlachantoni, Reference Vlachantoni2008; Jankowski, Reference Jankowski2011; AHRC, 2013b; Courtin et al., Reference Courtin, Jemiai and Mossialos2014). In some countries, such as Finland, France and Britain, the credits have become easier to access (AHRC, 2013b). In Britain's flat-rate public pension, for example, the number of years required for a full contributions record was reduced (DWP, 2006).Footnote 5 In several countries, credits were increased in value. In Germany, the value was increased to 100 per cent of the average wage (Fultz, Reference Fultz2011). In some countries, the eligibility criteria governing access to the credits were altered to broaden the population eligible. For example, in France credits were expanded to include fathers (in 2010), and in Britain credits were extended in 2011 to grandparents who provide regular childcare for their grandchildren (Fultz, Reference Fultz2011). In other countries, credits have been made more flexible. In Germany, in 2001 credits were made available to parents who continued to provide care but returned to work part-time, and in Japan, since 2005 the one-year period during which time the parent can receive the credits changed from the child's first year of life to any time in the first three years (Fultz, Reference Fultz2011; AHRC, 2013b).
These changes have been introduced with the goals of improving the extent to which periods spent caring are compensated in second tier public pension schemes and of improving the adequacy of the retirement incomes of parents and carers (Samek Lodovici et al., Reference Samek Lodovici, Crepaldi, Corsi and Naaf2011). Few evaluations of the effectiveness of carer credits have been conducted and the results are inconclusive. Overall, the evaluative literature suggests that carer credits in public pensions have had the effect of modestly improving women's retirement incomes (Evandrou and Glaser, Reference Evandrou and Glaser2003; Jankowski, Reference Jankowski2011; AHRC, 2013b). Financial credits are more effective than time credits at improving women's pensions, particularly earnings-related (rather than flat-rate) financial credits (Jankowski, Reference Jankowski2011). All types of credits are more likely to benefit higher income women, and the effectiveness of carer credits could therefore be improved by targeting credits to low income women (Steinhilber, Reference Steinhilber2003; Jankowski, Reference Jankowski2011). One method of doing this is to ensure that carer credits are accessible to parents and carers who are outside of the paid workforce when they commence care. Linking eligibility for carer credits to periods of parental leave excludes this important group of parents and carers. In some countries, this issue is addressed by linking carer credit eligibility to receipt of an income support payment (AHRC, 2013b). As women's retirement incomes are not only affected by periods outside of work but also by periods of part-time work while caring, the evaluative literature suggests that continuing to provide credits when an individual returns to work part-time potentially mitigates the effects of periods of low income while combining part-time work and care (Fultz, Reference Fultz2011).
Hence, changes to the value and coverage of carer credits in public pension schemes have improved credits for parents, and, importantly, have made credits available to informal carers of people with disability or illness. Research suggests that these changes have been positive, though small, steps in ameliorating the retirement income penalty associated with care provision. Continuing to improve the extent to which public schemes produce adequate and equitable pension outcomes is vital to the standards of living experienced by carers in their old age (Evandrou and Glaser, Reference Evandrou and Glaser2003; Price, Reference Price2007; Renga et al., Reference Renga, Molnar-Hidassy and Tisheva2010). There are lessons to be learnt from developments of carer credits in public schemes for the emergence of credits in private schemes.
Carer credits in private pension schemes
The review revealed that the carer credits emerging in private pension schemes are in their infancy and vary across countries. All of the examples of carer credits to private pensions identified in this review are set out in Table 2. Some examples in Table 2, such as those in Sweden and Germany, are currently in place. Others, such as those in Hungary and Poland, have been affected by austerity measures in the last few years that dismantled large parts of their private pension systems (OECD, 2015). These examples have still been included in Table 2 as the objective was to shed light on possible models of private pension credits, regardless of whether or not they remain in place.
* The data presented in this table is partly drawn from data presented in the report emerging from the Australian Human Rights Commission study (AHRC, 2013b).
** These schemes no longer exist in the form presented in this table.
In Table 2, the first four rows include models of credits to second tier mandatory private pensions. In one instance (Poland), the state provides the credit or subsidy directly to the individual's savings, and in another instance (Hungary), the state provides a family/parental allowance from which the individual must pay a proportion into their retirement savings. Sweden and Chile do both. In Sweden, while caring for a young child, individuals are required to pay the compulsory 7 per cent employee private pension contribution from their benefit income, and the state pays the employer contribution directly into the individual's account. In Chile, individuals are required to pay 10 per cent of their parental leave payment into their private savings account, and the state provides women with one voucher for each child to compensate their savings when they retire. Denmark offers a different but interesting model in which the state credits the individual's public pension doubly to compensate for the losses in both the public and private systems. Britain provides the only example of state-mandated employer-funded contributions to private pensions during periods of care. Employers must make contributions to their employees’ occupational pensions during periods of statutory maternity leave. In Germany's voluntary private pension scheme, individuals with children receive higher tax subsidies. While the German system is voluntary and only accessible to higher income earners, it nonetheless provides a different model worth considering. All existing schemes are complex, restricted in coverage, low in value and therefore limited in the extent to which they can compensate for loss in savings during periods spent caring.
Trends and lessons learned
The review revealed that, to date, no country has a comprehensive state-mandated system for recognising care in their private pension system. All existing carer credits in private pension schemes are confined to childcare and are not available to carers of a person with disability, a long-term illness or frailty due to old age (AHRC, 2013b). In different countries, credits to private pension schemes are made by the state, by individuals or, in one case, by employers. In several countries, the state takes over the employer component of the contribution while the individual is outside of the workforce providing care (AHRC, 2013b). In Sweden and Denmark, for example, the state takes over the earnings-related employer contribution during periods of care (OECD, 2015).
In other cases, individuals are required to contribute a proportion of their income support or parental leave payment into their pension account. Credits made by individuals from their income support payments are often very low, and unlikely to compensate for the loss in retirement income associated with time spent caring. The adequacy of credits made by individuals from their parental leave payments will depend on the nature of a country's parental leave scheme. Credits made from flat-rate parental leave schemes that are based on the minimum wage are likely to be very low. A generous, earnings-related parental leave scheme will allow for credits that are more adequate in value. A state-funded addition to the existing parental leave scheme for crediting private pensions is likely to be more effective than compelling individuals to make the credit from an already low payment (AHRC, 2013b). At the same time, a system of private pension credits must be accessible to informal carers, and to parents and carers with no or precarious attachment to paid work, and, therefore, accessible independently of the parental leave system. Delivering such credits through the tax system must be done with caution so that all parents and carers can benefit, not just those who draw an income or pay taxes (as in the German scheme). A state-funded credit delivered directly into a person's private pension account is likely to avoid many of these potential pitfalls.
We found only one country – Britain – with a system in which employers are compelled to contribute to private pensions during periods of care. The uncommon nature of this arrangement is perhaps not surprising. Currently, many second tier private pension schemes involve mandatory or quasi-mandatory employer contributions to individual pension accounts (OECD, 2013, 190) (some involve mandatory employer contributions, others combine employer and employee contributions and some only involve mandatory employee contributions). The rate of contribution is usually set at a proportion of income (OECD, 2015). The pension contribution is effectively a part of their salary. At the same time, in most countries, the state (rather than the employer) provides an income to individuals during extended periods of absence from work due to caring responsibilities. In most countries, for example, paid parental leave is funded by the state (AHRC, 2013b). As it is the state providing the income to individuals during periods of absence from work, we would argue that it is a natural extension of this principle that the state also assumes responsibility for the pension contribution (or carer credit).
One country, Britain, provides an exception. In Britain, employers contributing to an occupational pension on behalf of an employee must continue to make pension contributions on behalf of that employee while the employee is on statutory maternity leave, or pay, at the rate that they were contributing before the employee went on leave.Footnote 6 In Britain's statutory maternity pay scheme, individuals can receive paid leave for up to thirty-nine weeks. The first six weeks is at 90 per cent of the individual's earnings before they went on leave (or the prevailing flat rate, whichever is higher), and the remaining period is at the flat-rate (or 90 per cent of previous earnings, whichever is lower). Employers pay the statutory maternity pay to their employees and the government reimburses the employer for 92 per cent of that payment (or 104.5 per cent in the case of small businesses) (Forbes, Reference Forbes2009). In this sense, while parental leave pay is for the most part state-funded, the way in which the scheme is administered means that employers pay the maternity pay and the pension contribution, and are then reimbursed the maternity pay component.
There is scope in other countries for employers to make pension contributions on behalf of their employees while they are absent from work due to caring responsibilities. Many employers globally provide parental leave pay to their employees, and include in this workplace entitlement the pension contribution (AHRC, 2013b). In some states, governments encourage employers to do this. In Sweden, for example, employer contributions to private pensions during periods of care are encouraged, and most employers comply (OECD, 2011). However, employer-funded carer credits are by their nature confined to those temporarily taking leave from employment, whereas state-funded credits have the capacity to encompass those people, like many carers of a person with a disability, who do not have any attachment to work for extended periods.
Hence, a search for models of carer credits in private pensions found few. While some models are emerging, the schemes are in their early stages. They vary in their design features and are limited in value and coverage, and categorically exclude informal carers. In addition, there has been no comprehensive policy or scholarly debate about what this new policy approach means for retirement incomes systems around the world and the principles that underpin them, and how we might go about understanding, developing and evaluating pension credits in private pension schemes. As a result, now is the ideal time for deep consideration of the optimal design features of such credit schemes, and their underpinning principles. The next section provides this discussion. It offers the first conceptual analysis of carer credits in private pensions, examining where they fit into the principles that underpin contemporary public and private retirement incomes systems. Then drawing on what we have learnt from pension credits in second tier public schemes, it sets out some lessons for credits in second tier private schemes.
Discussion: recognising care in changing pension systems
Ostensibly, carer credits in private pension schemes do not accord neatly with the existing principles underpinning either public or private retirement income schemes. They are transactions that occur outside of the mechanisms and principles governing public pension schemes and appear inconsistent with the principles and objectives underpinning private pension schemes. However, we argue that carer credits in private pension schemes are indeed consistent with the principles underpinning both the public and private pension systems. They are consistent with the principles underpinning carer credits in public systems because, like public credits, they recognise the important contribution made by people providing care and attempt to ameliorate the impact of those caring responsibilities on an individual's retirement income. On the surface, publicly funded carer credits to private pensions appear antithetical to the purported principles and objectives underpinning private pensions. However, when examined more closely, we argue, carer credits are not only consistent with the principles underpinning private pension schemes but can, in fact, strengthen those principles.
The rationaleFootnote 7 offered by proponents of private pension provision is that mandating or incentivising private pensions will meet the following principles and objectives:
-
• increase individual reserves of, and reliance on, private savings;
-
• increase the adequacy of retirement incomes and therefore standards of living in older age;
-
• smooth income over the life-course; and
-
• encourage and subsidise private savings for old age throughout the life-course to reduce public transfers to public pensions.
Publicly funded carer credits in private pension schemes are wholly consistent with these principles: they support people with interrupted labour market histories due to caring responsibilities to improve their private savings, increasing the adequacy of their retirement incomes; they support the large proportion of the population who have interrupted workforce histories to smooth their incomes over periods in which their caring responsibilities are more or less intensive; and, like the taxation concessions that already exist for contributions to private pension schemes, carer credits are a method of encouraging and subsidising private savings for old age throughout the life-course to augment the private pension balances available to people in old age.
Nor will the provision of publicly funded credits to private pension schemes intrinsically undermine the objective of fiscal savings. Such a move could shift government expenditure from spending on public pensions at the end of a person (or carer's) life to spending on credits to private pensions during a person's life, credits that are made to a private account that accumulates interest over time.Footnote 8 In addition, the shift towards private provision already generates high levels of tax expenditure on subsidies for private pensions (Hughes and Sinfield, Reference Hughes, Sinfield, Hughes and Stewart2004). Hence, in most countries the state already plays a strong role as ‘facilitator’, encouraging and subsidising private pensions at various stages of the life-course (Hamilton, Reference Hamilton2012; Foster, Reference Foster2014), and these credits are extending the subsidies enjoyed by high income earners to parents or carers. One method of reducing the overall cost to the state of expenditure on carer credits in private schemes would be to reduce the regressive nature of taxation concessions on private pension contributions. Finally, if the alternative is moving carers into the workforce to make their own contributions to private pensions, the cost to the state of replacing the care that they were providing is estimated to be extremely high (Buckner and Yeandle, Reference Buckner and Yeandle2011; Hoenig and Page, Reference Hoenig and Page2012; Deloitte Access Economics, 2015; Reinhard et al., Reference Reinhard, Feinberg, Choula and Houser2015) – likely to be significantly higher than paying for carer credits.
Publicly funded carer credits to private pensions are not only consistent with the principles and objectives of private pensions, they also have the potential to strengthen them. Currently, the gender inequalities in access to private pensions undermine the private pension systems’ own objectives as set out above. Among those with interrupted workforce histories and whose opportunities to contribute to private pensions are hampered, private systems can at best only partially meet the objectives of improving retirement income adequacy, smoothing income over the life-course, and encouraging or subsidising private saving. Hence, publicly funded carer credits to private pension schemes are not only a method of more equitably recognising the contribution of those providing care and ameliorating the consequent gap in retirement incomes, but they are also consistent with and have the potential to strengthen the principles and objectives underpinning private pension systems.
For governments recognising this and contemplating the introduction of carer credits of this kind, and given the absence of any existing ‘exemplar’ models of carer credits in private pension schemes, what might these credits look like? Based on the evidence presented above, they should be underpinned by the following principles:
-
• People who provide care make a large social and economic contribution and this contribution should be recognised in private as well as public pension systems.
-
• As a result, governments have a responsibility to minimise the ‘retirement income penalty’ in private pension systems created by care provision.
-
• ‘Private’ pensions are a form of state-subsidised saving to improve standards of living in retirement, and carers have a right to state-subsidised saving and improved standards of living in retirement.
Drawing on the characteristics that are most effective in public schemes, some lessons for the design of carer credits in private schemes are as follows:
-
• Carer credits need to be provided for both parental care and informal care (i.e. care for people with disability, long-term illness or frailty due to old age).
-
• Carer credits need to be equally available to women and men.
-
• Carer credits need to explicitly target low-income earners: credits to a system of private pensions that are accessible only to a small wealthier proportion of the population, or those on paid leave, will not achieve their desired objectives. Those in precarious work and on low or no incomes must be able to access the private pension system if they are to benefit from credits to private pensions.
-
• Carer credits can be earnings-related or flat rate, but the base rate in either system must be adequate to have an impact on savings. Moreover, there should be an adequate minimum credit level to protect those with low or no income when they assume caring responsibilities.
-
• Carer credits need not be dependent on complete labour market withdrawal. Continuing to provide full, partial or top-up credits for a specified time period after an individual returns to part-time work can both reduce disincentives to return to work and ameliorate inequalities in retirement incomes created by part-time work (not just periods when people are completely withdrawn from the labour market) (AHRC, 2013a; 2013b).
Conclusion
Pensions linked to workforce participation or earnings throughout the life-course, in particular second tier public and private pension schemes, create unequal outcomes for people who provide care. As the ageing population creates greater demand for unpaid care, unequal and inadequate pensions are likely to become a more pressing problem for a growing proportion of the population. Carer credits in public pension schemes have emerged in recognition of the contribution carers make, and to compensate, at least to some extent, for the effects that caring responsibilities have on people's retirement incomes. However, improvements to public carer credits that aim to mitigate inequalities created by care provision have been undermined by the shift towards private provision, which has no mechanism for recognising care and widens inequalities in retirement incomes. Ideally, a generous public pension would create significantly more equitable outcomes. However, if private pensions are the route being taken by governments globally, we need to consider how we can work within private pension schemes to address inequalities experienced by people who provide care. Carer credits in second tier, mandatory private pension schemes are one possible measure for doing so, and they require investigation as an option.
Pension systems are complex and highly varied across countries (OECD, 2013) and the potential for carer credits to be incorporated into the different pension regimes and the way in which this can take place will differ considerably across countries. This article provided the first review of international activity in the field of carer credits in private pensions in the search of an ‘exemplar’ model. It revealed that in a small number of countries, carer credits are being incorporated into their private pension systems, but this is rare and the measures are limited in value and coverage and do little to mitigate the care penalty. In addition, these measures are being introduced in the absence of comprehensive reflection on what the principles and objectives underpinning them should be, and which design characteristics will enable them to operate effectively to meet these objectives in a way that is consistent with these principles.
In order to fill this gap, this article aimed to provide a framework to understand, design and evaluate carer credits in private schemes. Drawing on an analysis of the details emerging from a review of carer credits in private schemes, and of several decades of lessons learnt regarding carer credits to public schemes, the desirable characteristics of carer credits in private schemes were described. In addition, the principles and objectives underpinning them were presented to guide policy and scholarly debate on this emerging but important policy subject.
Acknowledgements
The data presented in this article emerges from research undertaken for the Australian Human Rights Commission, ‘Investing in care: Recognising and valuing those who care’, by the authors as part of a research team. The authors of this article would like to acknowledge the other members of the research team, Professor Bettina Cass and Dr Trish Hill from UNSW, and Dimity Hodge, Alison Aggarwal and Pooja Chowdhary from the Australian Human Rights Commission. The authors would also like to thank Professor Jay Ginn for very insightful feedback on this article.