If you're looking for the United States on Natixis Investment Managers' 2019 Global Retirement Index, you have to drop down two spots from last year's index to No. 18, just above Slovenia and Malta. Natixis reported last week that the U.S. ranked the same or lower in all four sub-indices it considers in compiling the index: health, material well-being, finances, and quality of life. The annual index also identified low interest rates, longer lifespans, and the high cost of climate change as the three pressing global risks weighing on retirees, policymakers, and long-term sustainability. "Meeting the needs of today's retirees while preserving retirement security for future generations continues to be one of the most pressing challenges for economies around the globe," Jean Raby, chief executive at Natixis Investment Managers, said in a statement. Raby said the index is intended to facilitate conversation about the measures required to ensure retirement security on a global scale. The index considers 18 factors that influence retiree welfare across the four sub-indices, and calculates the relative performance for 44 countries on each of these criteria, resulting in a composite score that provides a comparative tool for evaluating retirement security globally. For the third consecutive year, Western Europe as a region led the index, with all five Nordic countries among the top 12 performers. |
Why the U.S. Ranking Dropped
Natixis identified several reasons why the United States ranked the same or lower on the new index compared with last year. In the finances category, the good news is that the U.S. remained in the top 10. However, the growing ratio of retirees-to-working adults is increasing pressure on Social Security and Medicare funds. Rising government debt and tax pressures also led to a lower score in this category. The U.S. had the eighth-worst score for income equality, even though it ranked sixth for income per capita among all countries in the Global Reporting Initiative, an independent international standards organization. Natixis said these factors generated a lower score for the U.S. in the material well-being category. The U.S. stayed in the top 10—at no. 10—for health, thanks to improved insured health expenditure and by maintaining the highest score globally for per capita health spending. But the U.S. experienced a decline in life expectancy as Americans' longevity failed to keep pace with that of top-ranked Japan and other nations. The U.S. also scored lower for happiness, which evaluates the quality of retirees' current lives, lowering its quality-of-life performance. Still, the U.S. had the seventh-highest score on the index for air quality, and it showed improvement in the environmental factors indicator score, though not enough to lift it out of the bottom 10 in that category. Check out the gallery to see the top 12 countries on the 2019 Global Retirement Index. From: ThinkAdvisor
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