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News ID: 92212
Publish Date : 09 July 2021 - 21:39

Pension Black Hole Haunts Saudi Retirement

RIYADH (Bloomberg) – Saudi Arabia is staring at a gaping black hole in state-controlled pension funds so large that the kingdom is having to take drastic counter-measures, including the raising of the retirement age, a move that could create problems for Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
The 35-year-old, who became the youngest crown prince in the kingdom’s history after deposing his cousin Muhammed Bin Nayef, may have no other choice.
According to three people familiar with the matter who spoke to Bloomberg, there is a $213 billion gap in the pension funds. The Saudi officials warned that the current system is unsustainable; as a result, Riyadh is contemplating a number of measures, of which raising the retirement age is one.
Another is to make workers contribute more of their salaries to the General Organization for Social Insurance (GOSI) which manages both public and private sector pensions within Saudi Arabia.
Although Saudi life expectancy is on the rise — it stands at 75 currently — and poses a pension headache in the kingdom and elsewhere, its crisis is unique. The official retirement age is 60 for both men and women, but about a third of employees are said to take early retirement after working just 20 or 25 years.
The scale of the problem was highlighted by Nader Al-Wahibi, the assistant governor at GOSI. He argued on state television recently that early retirement and longer life spans are endangering the pension fund’s future. The option to take retirement after 20 years of service was temporarily frozen last month.
“The people who are retiring early now are going to drain all of the money in the fund,” explained Al-Wahibi. “They’re living longer, and the money isn’t enough.” Workers currently pay 9 percent of their salaries into the pension fund.
His claims have angered some Saudis. “Even if we agreed that this is the truth, it shouldn’t be said in this dry, tough language,” said novelist Mohammed Al-Rotayyan on Twitter. “People aren’t numbers in a rigid accounting process.”
Al-Rotayyan’s comment highlights the deeper problem with bin Salman’s grand plan to modernize Saudi Arabia and reduce its dependency on oil through his Vision 2030 project. Like the other oil-rich Persian Gulf states, the kingdom rests on a very delicate social contract. A combination of perks and a bloated welfare system is used to ensure political quietism and public acquiescence.
The crown prince has already started to tinker with this delicate balance by cutting subsidies, introducing taxes and criticizing a top-heavy public sector.