May 01, 2019
Today, Brazilians will pour into the streets to vent their anger about something that, in fairness, makes a lot of people's eyes glaze over. But it's the same issue that's roiled politics in Spain, France, and Argentina recently. In Nicaragua last year, it prompted a violent political crisis. And in Russia – well, let's just say there is only one thing Vladimir Putin is truly afraid of and it's…
Pension reform.
Governments do a lot of things, but few of them affect people's welfare as directly as paying for their retirement. A pension is a promise: you will be provided for in your old age. When governments break that promise – as many do to avoid a debt crisis – the political consequences can be severe.
The problem: Many countries make overly generous promises when they set up their pension systems, underestimate how long people would live, or simply mismanage the money. Often, to keep the payments flowing, governments have to divert money from other productive uses or run up huge deficits. In Brazil's case, the financial mess threatens the country's economic stability and growth.
What are the options? One approach is to cut the outlays for retirees – by raising the retirement age, narrowing eligibility, or reducing payouts. But all of that is politically explosive. It not only hurts pensioners, but also their families, who must often help shoulder the burden of supporting them.
Another approach is to raise taxes. But the jump would be huge. In Europe, taxes would have to rise as much as 30 percent to cover future pension outlays, says the IMF. That would be political suicide.
What usually happens: Compromise. Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro wants to save $300 billion over the next decade but will almost certainly settle for less. Last year, Vladimir Putin watered down his own pension reform after it lopped double digits off his approval rating almost overnight.
It's a problem in the world's largest economy too. In the US, the Social Security system will have to start paying out less than originally promised in 2035 unless Congress reforms it. Many US states and cities are facing pension overhauls or higher taxes to put their plans on a more sustainable footing.
The political compromises required to solve these problems will be painful. Far from a boring story, pension reform cuts to the heart of what governments owe their citizens, and the difficult tradeoffs they face when those promises become unsustainable.
From Your Site Articles
More For You
Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and heads of foreign delegations arrive for a military parade marking the 80th anniversary of the end of World War Two, in Beijing, China, on September 3, 2025.
Sputnik/Sergey Bobylev/Pool via REUTERS
The “hermit kingdom” and its Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un are emerging from the G-Zero world in their strongest geostrategic position in decades.
Most Popular
Newly-elected Makerfield MP Andy Burnham arrives at Derby Gate by the Houses of Parliament, following UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer's announcement of the timeline for his resignation, in London, United Kingdom, on June 22, 2026.
REUTERS/Jack Taylor
GZERO speaks to Mujtaba Rahman, Eurasia Group’s managing director for Europe, about what the UK’s likely next leader can do to bring about some political stability.
The DRC outbreak has now recorded more cases in its first month than any previous Ebola outbreak
Competitive pay. 401(k) contributions upon employment and 6% company match once eligible. Up to 16 weeks of combined paid maternity and parental leave. These benefits and more inspire generations – Daidrian’s 18-year Walmart journey motivated her son Jonothan to launch his own career as a Walmart associate. Learn more.
© 2025 GZERO Media. All Rights Reserved | A Eurasia Group media company.
