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(UM05-13) - How to Integrate Disability Benefits into a System with Individual Accounts: The Chilean Model
Estelle James
Chile offers a unique case study of the joint functioning of a national
retirement system with private accounts and a national disability
insurance program with both public and private elements. The Chilean
system uses a worker's retirement savings account as part of his
disability insurance, but if the worker becomes disabled, government
tops up the account to a specified defined-benefit amount. The latter is
accomplished primarily through the private insurance market, but
government provides back-up guarantees. The individual account, in
effect, does double duty as an instrument of retirement savings plus
disability and survivor's insurance. This has the effect of keeping costs
down and making the system less sensitive to demographic shocks,
while the defined-benefit top-up reduces risk to the worker. The object
of this study is to examine how well this mixed public-private, partially
funded system has performed and to evaluate whether Chilean
experiences provide useful lessons for U.S. and other countries.
Publications (PDF)
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