By Lee Hyo-sik
Staff Reporter
Households' pension contributions and other social security-related
payments in Korea are increasing at the fastest pace among the 30 OECD
member economies.
The soaring costs are putting a heavier financial burden on families
here and diminishing their ability to spend on various goods and
services.
According to an OECD report Monday, Korea's ratio of pension and other
welfare-related spending on total taxation surged to 20.8 percent in
2007 from 7 percent in 1995. This 13.8-percentage point increase was
considerably higher than the average OECD gain of 0.5-percent over the
13-year period.
Statistics Korea also said domestic households paid an average of
170,000 won per month from July to September for state pension, health,
employment insurance and other social security-related coverage, up 38
percent from 123,000 won in the third quarter of 2004.
These expenditures are expected to continue to head upward in the
future, with Korean working families having to pay more to financially
support a growing number of senior citizens and boost the rapidly
falling birthrate.
In a report to the National Assembly, the Ministry of Strategy and
Finance said the ratio of pension and other welfare-related
contributions to gross domestic product (GDP) will reach 6 percent this
year. It will continue to rise to 6.3 percent in 2010, 6.7 percent in
2011, 7 percent in 2012 and 7.3 percent in 2013.
A ministry official said national pension, health insurance and other
social security related-expenses will likely go up at a faster clip in
the future, due to the worsening financial soundness of the
state-funded welfare schemes. ``Additionally, the rapidly aging
population and low birthrates are forcing working families to shoulder
greater financial burdens to support the elderly and newborns. It will
negatively affect households' ability to spend, further dampening the
prolonged sluggish domestic demand.''
Salaried workers and the self-employed making over 3.6 million won per
month will likely pay more to their state-run pension program from next
April, with the government moving to apply higher rates to high-income
earners.
The national employment insurance is also expected to charge higher
rates to contributors as its financial soundness has deteriorated, due
to the record of number of laid-off workers claiming unemployment
benefits this year in the aftermath of the global economic downturn.
Salaried employees and the self-employed will pay a greater portion of
their income for the state-run health insurance as its premiums will be
hiked 4.9 percent in January next year.
Truckers, construction workers and other physical labor providers will
be required to pay greater premiums, up as much as 10 percent in 2010
to benefit from insurance that covers workplace accidents.
leehs@koreatimes.co.kr
우공's story/english study2009. 12. 7. 19:39
Korea’s Social Security Cost Grows Fastest in OECD