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Argentina: 13 years of pension reform boosts profits,
impoverishes older workers
By Renato Santos
8 June 2007
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At the beginning of the 1990s, following the dictates of the
international financial agencies, principally the World Bank and
the IMF, some Latin American countries began an overhaul of their
social security systems for retired workers. The principal justification
for these social security reforms was the growth of
public deficits, which left governments incapable of expanding
their investments in basic infrastructure.
In Argentina, this reform was carried out in 1994 by then-President
Carlos Menem. The result, while pleasing the mandarins of the
IMF, was a disaster for the Argentine population.
The most controversial element of the economic package introduced
by Menem was the privatization of social security. The proposal
said that workers, on entering the labor market, would have to
contribute to a public social security program providing a reduced
benefit and to choose a complimentary plan between the Social
Security Administrations public pay-as-you-go system and
one of the individual retirement account programs, known as the
capitalization regime. If the option was not explicitly
declared by the individual worker, he or she would be automatically
enrolled in a private individual account. Thus, gradually, the
state would free itself from the responsibility for social security
and the burdens resulting from the growth of poverty in the region.
The logic of the system proposed by Menem was simple. Every
worker would be free to choose the retirement system that they
wanted. In practice, however, things worked out differently. As
Sergio Massa, the executive director of Argentinas National
Administration of Social Security pointed out in the January 25,
2007 edition of the Jornal Valor Econômico, Only
30 percent of the nearly 50,000 people who enter the labor market
annually voluntarily choose the system to which they want to contribute.
While less than a third of Argentine workers choose the plan
to which they will belong, those who do choose find that once
they have selected a plan, they can never leave it or trade it
for another. And still, in the majority of cases, it is the employers
who decide where their employees are enrolled and, after choosing
the private system, they also select the plans administrators.
Thus the freedom of choice that supposedly was being given
to the workers represented a propaganda cliché promoted
by moneyed interests to justify the gutting of Argentinas
social security system. It was the slogan employed by Menem to
justify the false idea that the market would optimize and maximize
retirement benefits. In practice, this freedom of choice became
a trap for the workers that only benefited the state and big capital.
Under the system, workers are compelled to contribute for 30
years to receive a universal basic pension at the end of their
working life. The question that arises is what happens to workers
who spend most of their lives without work or working in the informal
sector? The answer of the social security system is clear: they
will be condemned to work until the last days of their lives or,
if they can no longer earn money, be forced to depend upon the
aid of their relatives.
This problem is aggravated by the fact that when workers get
older they are excluded from the labor market, being, in the majority
of cases, replaced by younger workers capable of carrying out
heavier labor. Thus, millions of workers, heads of families, as
they enter old age face being marginalized and pauperized.
After the 2001 crisis
The consequences of this retirement system became visible and
disastrous with the Argentine crisis of 2001. The privileges of
the social security system offered to judges and other state functionaries
were maintained, but the general population saw its benefits slashed.
The justification used for maintaining the privileges of judges,
legislators and others was the preservation of the principle
of the separation of powers. The government, to avoid a
conflict between the powers, decided not to extend
the social security reform to the judiciary branch in general.
Thus, a judge on retiring maintains his full salary and, in addition,
is exempt from taxes. It is interesting that this matter was not
a subject for debate during the elaboration of the social security
reform.
According to the BBC, in Argentina judges continue retiring
with what they received when they were workingbetween 4,500
and 12,000 pesos [US$1,385 and $4,100]while public and private
sector workers receive on average 450 pesos [US$155]. Or,
a judge receives nearly 10 times more than a retired worker.
Meanwhile, the workers who chose the private system would have
to content themselves with being swindled out of their retirement.
What happened? Theoretically, the private pension funds should
have held onto a percentage of the assets as they were capitalized
and should have guaranteed the individual property of the funds,
as if they were insurance for the workers. However, when the generalized
crisis in Argentina became critical, the government carried out
an assets swap.
In the middle of 2001, Argentine Economy Minister Domingo Cavallo
floated the swap, in which government debt due for
repayment was to be replaced by 10- to 30-year bonds bearing a
higher rate of interest. While Wall Street and other foreign creditors
refused the offer, by the end of the year Cavallo issued his patriotic
call, simply forcing the plan on the pension funds, taking
some $3.5 billion out of them to service the countrys debt
and replacing the money with government bonds paying below market
rates of interest. By 2002, the government defaulted on its debts
and then imposed a conversion of dollar assets of domestic investors
into pesos, an effective devaluation that wiped out two-thirds
of the value accumulated in the individual accounts.
By 1998, there existed more than 20 functioning private social
security funds in Argentina, with combined assets of US$5 billion
and an annual average rate of return of 12 percent (highly profitable
by international standards). This capital, which according to
the propaganda of the reformers was going to create
jobs and the expansion of industry, instead was concentrated in
government bonds and traded on the worlds stock markets,
reflecting the general tendency of capital concentration. The
funds became an object for the predatory and speculative operations
of the Wall Street finance houses preying on the emerging
markets. The five largest administrators of pension funds
by 1998 accounted for 65 percent of the Argentine social security
funds.
According to Meiriane Nunes Amaro, legislative consultant for
Social Security in Latin America, the results obtained after two
years of the reform in Argentina (1994-96) were encouraging: 70
percent of the insured were linked to the capitalization regime,
the majority belonging to the younger age groups, and evasion
was reduced.
At a conference held in Buenos Aires in March of 2007, CEPAL
(Economic Commission for Latina America and the Caribbean) demonstrated
some of the obvious consequences of social security reform in
Argentina. The following points were raised:
1. Social security expenses increased significantly in the
first years of the reform. But this result provoked a new deficit
in the systemrising from US$891 million before the reform
in 1993 to US$6.7 billion in 2000. The Argentine public deficit
in 2000 was US$6.9 billion, practically the same size as the social
security deficit (facts recorded by the International Labor OrganizationILO);
2. Among the most important causes of the social security deficit
was the reduction in employer contributions, which provoked a
deficit equal to 1.3 percent of the GDP. The practical significance
of this process was the reduction of the social responsibility
for the retirement system on the part of big business;
3. The reform yielded an increase in the percentage of the
urban population over 65 who lacked any benefits whatsoever, rising
from 23 percent in 1994 to 35 percent in 2002;
4. This ratio varied according to gender, with the rate among
men rising from 15 percent in 1994 to 31 percent in 2002, and
among women going from 29 percent to 37 percent in these same
years;
5. The problem is tending to deepen, as the figures indicate
a decline in the economically active population covered by social
security, which fell from 47 percent to 36 percent between October
of 1994 and May of 2003.
6. While in 1987 contributions and taxes financed practically
all of the expenses of social security, by 2001 they financed
only 31 percent;
7. While 36 percent of the population between the ages of 65
and 69 was excluded from coverage by social assistance before
the reform, the rate rose to 48 percent afterwards.
The additional pressures from the IMF
In addition to this, the IMF is exerting great pressure for
the privatization of the remaining public part of the social security
system in Argentina. The IMFs policy in the region is to
demand fiscal readjustment aimed at achieving a consistent surplus
in the public budget. Who pays the costs of these demands? The
IMFs recommendation is to slash public spending, including
for social security, but to leave Argentinas creditors untouched.
Thus, the deficit provoked by the 1994 reform was defrayed by
the Argentine government by driving the pension funds deeper into
debt. The contributions that before went into the current account
receipts of the government to pay social security benefits to
workers are now used to pay interest to the private sector. It
is no accident that pension funds accounted for 65 percent of
Argentine government bonds in 2001.
Social security reform in Argentina was imposed without any
serious discussion involving the broad mass of the working population.
Despite its being presented to Argentine workers as something
marvelous for them, it was implemented by a corrupt government
and parliament which represented only the interests of capital.
With the reform, the workers remained increasingly abandoned in
their old age, while stockholders and insurance companies have
grown ever richer and more powerful.
A secure and dignified life for workers in their latter yearsas
well as beforewill only be possible with the end of the
capitalist labor market and the liquidation of all of its social
security reforms. Such a life can be achieved for
millions only when human beings cease to be treated as mere labor
power. That is a social task that can be realized only through
the struggle to achieve socialism on a world scale.
See Also:
Police killing of teacher
provokes national strike in Argentina
[11 April 2007]
Argentina: landowners
withhold meat supplies from countrys population
[20 December 2006]
Ford Motor charged
as accomplice in Argentinas dirty war
[25 February 2006]
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