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Social Security System in India:An International Comparative Analysis


Affiliations
1 Department of Humanities & Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, Powai, Mumbai, India
 

This paper examines selected components of social security system in India and compares them with their OECD counterparts. Historically, the Indian policy makers have viewed the pension system as a welfare measure and therefore, it lacks in financial professionalism, diversification, and in the belief that pension funds can also he treated as an asset. The Indian system is biased towards the organized formal sector as workers in this sector are benefitted with the provisions under various labor laws. Even then the pension provisions in India are way far behind the OECD benchmark. In the unorganized sector, old age income remains mainly confined to voluntary savings. The New Pension System although making the pension amount an old age asset, is silent on the social security provisions to the poor. The average income earners are not able to replace their pre-retirement earnings with pensions compared to most of the OECD countries. In terms of the gross pension wealth, India is nearer to the OECD average only in the low income category for men. Out of 5 percent of health care expenditure as a percentage of GDP, government's share in India accounts even less than 1 percent which is significantly lower than the OECD benchmark.

Keywords

Social Security System, Pension Funds, India, OECD.
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  • Social Security System in India:An International Comparative Analysis

Abstract Views: 228  |  PDF Views: 73

Authors

Rupak Kumar Jha
Department of Humanities & Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, Powai, Mumbai, India
Surajit Bhattacharyya
Department of Humanities & Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, Powai, Mumbai, India

Abstract


This paper examines selected components of social security system in India and compares them with their OECD counterparts. Historically, the Indian policy makers have viewed the pension system as a welfare measure and therefore, it lacks in financial professionalism, diversification, and in the belief that pension funds can also he treated as an asset. The Indian system is biased towards the organized formal sector as workers in this sector are benefitted with the provisions under various labor laws. Even then the pension provisions in India are way far behind the OECD benchmark. In the unorganized sector, old age income remains mainly confined to voluntary savings. The New Pension System although making the pension amount an old age asset, is silent on the social security provisions to the poor. The average income earners are not able to replace their pre-retirement earnings with pensions compared to most of the OECD countries. In terms of the gross pension wealth, India is nearer to the OECD average only in the low income category for men. Out of 5 percent of health care expenditure as a percentage of GDP, government's share in India accounts even less than 1 percent which is significantly lower than the OECD benchmark.

Keywords


Social Security System, Pension Funds, India, OECD.