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Demographics are rewriting the balance sheets of developed countries around the world—and pushing traditional pension systems beyond their limits.

The pressure is particularly evident in OECD countries. For these nations, the average ratio of older citizens (65 and older) to younger citizens (ages 15 to 64) will increase on average 2.5 times by 2050 from 2000 levels. That translates into a growing economic burden on the working-age population, as those younger workers will need to contribute an increasing share of their income to fund pensions. By 2060, total pension expenditures as a share of combined GDP for 31 of the 38 OECD nations is projected to hit 10.3%, up from 8.9% for the period 2020 through 2023.

Some countries have taken action to confront the challenge. Sweden, Denmark, and the UK, among others, have reformed their pensions systems over the last 20 years and put them on a firmer financial footing. Still, many of the changes have come with trade-offs, such as benefit reductions that disproportionately impact low-income groups.

So how can developed nations remake their pension frameworks to meet the needs of their aging societies? Our in-depth study of the pension challenge reveals that governments have an opportunity to act in two primary areas. First, they can rethink pension design by incentivizing funded pension schemes, supported by automatic adjustment triggers and poverty-floor guarantees. Second, they can ensure effective implementation of those reforms, including through citizen-focused engagement.

Pension reform is an inherently complex and politically difficult undertaking. Because the costs of inaction—and any benefits of reform—are not always immediately felt, inertia often prevails. However, delaying reforms to avoid public controversy only magnifies fiscal and political risks. Countries that develop thoughtful policy designs and robust strategies for implementation will be far better positioned to meet this urgent challenge.

Components of a Sound Pension System

The demographic pressure on pensions today stems from multiple factors—notably, increased longevity, decreasing birth rates, and slowing immigration. Reform can strike the right balance between the objectives of the pension trilemma (see Exhibit 1):

the pension trilemma: systems need to balance three objectives

While financial unsustainability is typically the immediate challenge, safeguarding adequacy and equity levels is equally important. And although pension redesigns have typically prioritized only one or two of these objectives, the most successful will strike a balance between all three.

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Two Dimensions of Pension Design. Pensions systems are defined along two primary dimensions: financing methods and benefit design. Financing methods fall into two categories: pay as you go (PAYG), where current contributors pay for existing retirees’ benefits; and funded, in which people contribute in advance the money that will subsidize their own benefits, thereby enhancing both sustainability and equity. Benefit design also falls into two categories: defined benefit (DB), where the provider carries both investment risk (tied to how investments perform over time) and longevity risks (related to whether recipients live longer than expected); and defined contribution (DC), where payouts are not fixed but instead depend on contributions made by employees, employers, or both.

Building a Balanced Pension System

Pension reform success rests on two foundational elements: sound system design and smart implementation.

Rethink System Design. Three fundamental elements can be built into pension systems (see Exhibit 2):

Three cornerstones of smart pension system design

Drive Smart Implementation. Implementing new pension systems effectively is as important as designing them intelligently. There are two essential areas to be considered (see Exhibit 3).

Engagement plan and mechanisms to smooth the transition are key to implementing pension reform

While effective implementation, along with smart design, increases the chances of successful pension reform, broader societal shifts are also important. Chief among these is enabling people to extend their working lives. Achieving this will require efforts beyond government policy alone. Companies can support this change—and create value—by optimizing work environments to enhance older employees’ well-being and engagement. Meanwhile, individuals can embrace new ways to continue their careers.


Governments have an opportunity to proactively address pension sustainability. Delaying action might be appealing in the short term but can lead to greater costs later. Taking timely, measured steps today offers a chance to put pension systems on a more sustainable, adequate and equitable footing for the future.

The authors thank the following BCG colleagues for their contributions to the research: Cesar Sanchez, Eiichi Hasegawa, Toshihiro Takeda, Vincent Chin, Daiki Miura, Germaine Tan, Mayuki Yaso, Nagi Cao, Saaya Nakano, Shunsuke Ochi, and Yoshiki Kasuga.