Category Archives: Nederland Pensioenland

NORFACE Funding for DEEPEN Project

I am thrilled to announce that the NORFACE network is funding our project “Democratic Governance of Funded Pension Schemes” (DEEPEN).

DEEPEN explores the democratic governance of capital-funded occupational pension schemes. We adopt Scharpf’s distinction between input legitimacy (are collectively binding decisions in line with citizens’ democratically expressed preferences?) and output legitimacy (do collectively binding decisions serve the common interests of the citizens?) to investigate how governments, regulators and labour market actors govern funded pensions (input legitimacy) and whether participants are satisfied with pension fund performance (output legitimacy). The project focuses on Denmark, the Netherlands, Germany, Austria, Ireland and Spain because the structure of funded pension provision varies along key dimensions relevant to input and output legitimacy.

The project combines quantitative analysis of survey data with comparative case studies based on elite and expert interviews and analysis of primary and secondary documents. Four work packages investigate the following research questions: How does national policy define participant influence on funded pension provision? How do stakeholders use pension fund governance to influence investment policy? How have capital-funded pension schemes performed in terms of pension outcomes across European welfare states? To what extent are individual attitudes on pension investment aligned with these inputs and outputs?

The project team includes Karen Anderson (PI) from University College Dublin, Juan Fernandez from University Carlos III in Madrid and Tobias Wiss from the Johannes Keppler University Linz. We’ll be hiring post-doctoral researchers (Dublin, Leiden) and PhD students (Linz, Madrid) to join our project team.

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Upcoming Talk: NIAS Seminar

This Thursday, I will be presenting new research in the seminar series of the Netherlands Institute of Advanced Studies.

My paper presents a historical case study of the investment politics of Dutch pension fund for public employees, ABP (Algemeen Burgerlijk Pensioenfonds). Combining both quantitative and qualitative analysis, the research maps the financial flows between ABP and the broader political economy before and after WW2, while at the same time shedding light on the political considerations that informed the fund’s investment policies. I show how over time ABP’s investment politics became increasingly caught between the political interests of the state on the one hand and the dictates of dominant financial theories on the other hand.

The history of the ABP is indicative of the centrality of pension funds to the Dutch political economy. Contrary to traditional bank-based or stock-market based systems, the presence of these large funds have allowed the Netherlands to combine a generous welfare state with high financial development. Still, as the case study shows, the ongoing financialization of the welfare state has coincided with a depoliticization of pension investment. The result is a loss of public control over the flows of capital that emanate from the Dutch pension funds on the one hand and growing instability within the private pension system on the other hand.

This is unpublished work. Please e-mail, if interested in the paper.

FotoRouge

Source: H.W. Groeneveld, “De kosten onzer sociale verzekering,” De Werkgever, February 1925, p.37.

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FGGA Research Publication

FGGA5I am very honored to be one of twelve academics from the Faculty of Governance and Global Affairs to have been featured in this new publication. Fast forward to page 58 to find out why pensions aren´t boring and why do-it-yourself-pensions are a bad idea. Or scroll down to read the full interview below. 

Pension schemes? Bóóóring! At least, that’s what lots of  people think, but not Natascha van der Zwan. On the contrary, the assistant professor and political scientist is fascinated by the subject. She compares pension systems in various countries (in historical perspective) and reflects on the way they work out for citizens. ‘Saving for later on an individual basis? That will widen the gap between rich and poor.’

Pensions are as old as time, says Natascha van der Zwan. ‘In Roman days, for instance, it was already common that the state (if one can use that term) rewarded veterans for their services with a “pension provision”, a piece of land. In The Netherlands, the first pension schemes came into being in the early 19th century. Strikingly enough, they were also, at first, meant for veterans, and for civil servants. The government provided a favor, a token of appreciation from the king to people who had distinguished themselves in government service. Soon, however, those provisions were expanded to another category of pensioners:  widows and orphans. Based on the idea that one should protect families without a breadwinner from further misery.

Over the course of the 19th century pension rights were extended to other groups, and the execution of those rights sided more and more with employers. Around the turn of the century , a number of big firms already provided their workers with a pension. Still as a favor, not as a right. And actually this is still the case today. In The Netherlands we have two kinds of “pension”: a state allowance at a fixed level, to which every citizen is entitled (the “AOW”). And a supplementary pension, as a rule managed by pension funds or insurance companies and paid for by employers and employees during the course of their working life. Agreements on contributions are part of the terms of employment.  Logical, as pension is in fact deferred wage: a form of salary that’s only paid after some time. ‘It’s typical for The Netherlands that management and labour organisations decide together on pension rights, often through collective labour agreements.’

Public Pensions

Van der Zwan is working on a historical study comparing pensions schemes in Germany, the United States and The Netherlands. ‘In Germany a public pension (provided by the state) was introduced  in the late 19th century. Private companies were not involved in this scheme. Even today, the government plays a leading role in pension provisions and pension funds are therefore less common in Germany than in the Netherlands. The country relies on the state pension, paid for by premiums. Current employees provide for current pensioners. But if more people retire and fewer people have a job, you’re in for a huge problem. Either workers pay more, or the government has to supplement.’

In the United States the ball lies in the employees’ court. Companies are not obliged to offer any form of pension, and usually they don’t – many people  rely on their own savings. Didn’t labour unions try to change this situation? Of course, and in the seventies the American unions were a force to be reckoned with. But their influence dwindled. They simply lost the battle.’

Do-It-Yourself-Pension

In the Netherlands, the question if the pension system should be scrapped is the subject of heated debate. ‘Not for the first time’, says Van der Zwan. ‘In the nineties, politicians were already questioning the current system. Employees, they argued, should be more at liberty to spend or invest their deferred wages as they saw fit. But time was not ripe for this yet. This only changed when the consequences of the financial crisis became noticeable. People were dissatisfied and new ideas gained ground. And what about Germany and the US? Of course, they also feel the pressure of economic circumstances and an aging population. These countries advocate making pension provisions less voluntary, along the lines of the Dutch system.’

Van der Zwan herself is critical  of the new pension ideas. ‘We know from the scientific literature: voluntary systems do not work. People don’t save, they postpone saving, or and only consider the short term. Or they have just managed to fill their pension pot when they are confronted with higher care costs. There goes their pension!’

‘There are people who say that we have become too dependent on government provisions, and that they cost too much. I am not one of those people. We know that the “do-it-yourself-pension” can make citizens very insecure, as well as leading to more inequality between those who have sufficient knowledge, discipline and responsibility to save for later, and those who haven’t. A voluntary system will widen the gap between rich and poor, between people who’ll have all their eggs in their basket, and those who’ll lose out.’

Text by Andrea Hijmans

FGGA2

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Fellowship at NIAS

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I am very pleased to announce that I have been awarded an Instituut Gak Fellowship at the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences. I will be joining the NIAS in Amsterdam from early September 2018 until the end of January 2019. While at NIAS, I will be completing my book manuscript on the financialization of the Dutch pension system.

From my proposal: The project is a historical political economy of the Dutch pension system that investigates how the mutually constitutive relationship between the welfare state and the financial system shaped its development. Despite the international prominence of this case in academic scholarship and policy circles, a historical account of the Dutch pension system that integrates the study of social and financial policy has not yet been written. Five case studies of selected historical episodes from the early 20th century to the current period show how state, business and labor actors sometimes opposed, sometimes advanced financial development in order to achieve their social policy goals. This historical account of the Dutch pension system advances theoretical understandings of financialization in relation to the welfare state. The United States and Germany serve as shadow cases. Evidence is collected from national and international historical archives. The fellowship period would be used for the final write-up of the manuscript.

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Preview Nederland Pensioenland: nu bij Managementboek.nl!

Een sneak preview van mijn boek (samen met Sijbren Kuiper), Nederland Pensioenland, is nu verschenen op managementboek.nl. Naar aanleiding van de vijf grootste misverstanden over pensioen bespreken wij de belangrijkste punten uit ons boek.

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Nederland Pensioenland bij Spui25

Hoe is pensioen eigenlijk geregeld in Nederland? Wat gebeurt er met de premies die werknemers betalen? En is er later nog wel geld voor de pensioenen van de huidige generatie jongeren? Experts Sijbren Kuiper en Natascha van der Zwan leggen het uit, en gaan met het publiek in gesprek.

Naar aanleiding van het verschijnen van Nederland Pensioenland. Wat je wilt weten over pensioen (Amsterdam University Press, 2016) bespreken advocaat Sijbren Kuiper en onderzoeker Natascha van der Zwan alle ins en outs van het Nederlandse pensioenstelsel, en buigen zich over de vraag of en hoe het pensioenstelsel stand zal houden in de toekomst. Daarnaast zal de kennis van het publiek getest worden en is er ruim tijd voor vragen uit het publiek. De jonge politicoloog Jasper Simons modereert. Dit alles gebeurt op zeer toegankelijke wijze: je hoeft dus niet al veel te weten over pensioen om aan deze avond deel te nemen.

U kunt zich hier aanmelden voor deze avond.

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Nog steeds een pensioenmirakel?

Hoe miraculeus is ons pensioenstelsel? Nieuw hoofdstuk verschenen in deze mooie bundel over het Nederlandse poldermodel in de 21e eeuw. Verkrijgbaar in druk via Amsterdam University Press of gratis te downloaden via www.oapen.org.

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Nieuw boek over pensioen

Mijn nieuwe boek, met Sijbren Kuiper, over het Nederlandse pensioenstelsel verschijnt 15 september 2016 bij Amsterdam University Press.

Veel Nederlanders maken zich zorgen of zij later nog wel kunnen rekenen op een behoorlijk pensioen. Het antwoord op die vraag is helaas niet eenvoudig: de hoogte van het pensioen is afhankelijk van allerlei factoren, waaronder het overheidsbeleid, het overleg tussen sociale partners en de veranderingen op de financiële markten. Het pensioen is dan ook een uitermate complex onderwerp. Hoog tijd dus voor een overzichtelijke en toegankelijke uitleg!

Dit boekje beschrijft hoe de pensioenen in Nederland zijn geregeld en bespreekt de belangrijkste thema’s uit het huidige politieke debat over de toekomst van het Nederlandse pensioenstelsel. De auteurs bespreken het pensioen aan de hand van vragen waar iedereen mee zit:
– Hoe is mijn pensioen geregeld?
– Waar heb ik recht op?
– Tot welke leeftijd moet ik doorwerken?
– En mag ik zelf beslissen hoe mijn premie wordt belegd? 

Nederland Pensioenland

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