1820. Private Pension Funds in Argentina's New Integrated Pension System

Dimitri Vittas
(August 1997)

Private pension funds in Argentina's new integrated pension system have shown a vigorous response and a robust performance in a highly uncertain economic environment. But despite their success in mobilizing long-term funds and in earning high real investment returns, the funds have suffered from high operating and marketing costs.

Argentina implemented a major reform of its pension system in 1994. The new system has a mixed public-and-private two-pillar structure. Its main elements are an unfunded, defined-benefit pillar operated by the state and paying a basic pension to all workers who meet the minimum eligibility period, and a fully funded defined-contribution individual capitalization pillar managed by specially authorized companies (AFJPs). The second pillar also has a public defined-benefit component, which is operated on an unfunded basis.

The new system replaced the old public pay-as-you-go pension system, which was facing immense financial pressures.

Vittas assesses the performance of the funded component of the second pillar. He finds that:

The AFJP system faces three main challenges: how to contain operating and marketing costs; how to increase effective coverage; and how to relax the draconian regulations while maintaining a stable, transparent, and safe system.

This paper—a product of the Financial Sector Development Department—is part of a larger effort in the department to study private pension funds and contractual savings. Copies of the paper are available free from the World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433. Please contact Priscilla Infante, room F6P-204, telephone 202-473-7642, fax 202-522-3198, Internet address pinfante@worldbank.org. (34 pages)


Document no longer available in PDF format. Please try searching the World Development Sources.