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@inbook{9135, author = {Vostatek, Jaroslav}, address = {Lodz}, booktitle = {Pensions today. Economic, managerial, and social issues}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.34658/9788366287938}, editor = {Filip Chybalski, Edyta Marcinkiewicz}, keywords = {old-age pension; pension reform; personal pensions; state support; flat pension}, howpublished = {elektronická verze "online"}, language = {eng}, location = {Lodz}, isbn = {978-83-66287-93-8}, pages = {228-239}, publisher = {Lodz University of Technology Press}, title = {Czech Pension Policy}, url = {https://doi.org/10.34658/9788366287938}, year = {2021} }
TY - CHAP ID - 9135 AU - Vostatek, Jaroslav PY - 2021 TI - Czech Pension Policy VL - Neuveden PB - Lodz University of Technology Press CY - Lodz SN - 9788366287938 KW - old-age pension KW - pension reform KW - personal pensions KW - state support KW - flat pension UR - https://doi.org/10.34658/9788366287938 N2 - Inflation and the low indexation of bend points in the first half of the 1990s substantially reduced the dependence of old-age pensions on previous earnings. The 1996 Pension Insurance Act has added a small basic amount of all pensions to the system of ‘percentage amounts’ of individual pensions, heavily levelled by bend points and reduction coefficients. The ‘progressivity’ of this system is high: a newly granted average old-age pension is roughly by 30% earnings-related. The basic amount of old-age pension shall be transformed into a separate flat-rate pension, with an independent system of retirement age, minimum residence or economic activity (35 years) and valorization. The percentage amount of the old-age pension shall become an independent pension pillar of social insurance, optimally with the construction of the Austrian pension accounts, with a separate retirement age and valorization system and with a minimum insurance period of 3-5 years. The extremely complicated system of state support for ‘personal pensions’ is almost entirely the result of lobbying by the completely superfluous ‘pension companies’ that have a monopoly on the provision of supplementary pension savings. The rate of state support for employer contributions to these savings is 87%, which is by far the highest one in the world. State support for participant contributions is lower. More than half of the population is involved in the system, but its role in protection is as low as in other countries. The main purpose of ‘pension savings’ (and ‘building savings’) is tax optimization, coupled with the fiscal illusion that the state support is a free lunch. We recommend either a complete cancellation of state support for all financial products or the transition to a uniform TEE regime in the form of British Individual Savings Accounts (ISA) or Canadian Tax-Free Savings Accounts (TFSA). ER -
VOSTATEK, Jaroslav. Czech Pension Policy. Online. In Filip Chybalski, Edyta Marcinkiewicz. \textit{Pensions today. Economic, managerial, and social issues}. Lodz: Lodz University of Technology Press, 2021, p.~228-239. ISBN~978-83-66287-93-8. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.34658/9788366287938.
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