In the classical world, Romans offered veteran legionnaires (centurions) military pensions, typically in the form of a land grant or a special, often semi-public, appointment.
Augustus Caesar (63 BC–AD 14) introduced one of the first recognisable pension schemes in history with his military treasury. In 13 BC Augustus created a pension plan in which retired soldiers were to receive a pension (of minimum 3,000 denarii in a lump sum, which at the time represented around 13 times a legionnaires' annual salary) after 16 years of service in a legion and four years in the military reserves. The retiring soldiers were in the beginning paid from general revenues and later from a special fund (
aeririum militare) established by Augustus in 5 or 6 AD. This was in an attempt to quell a rebellion within the Roman Empire which was facing militaristic turmoil at the time. Widows' funds were among the first pension type arrangement to appear. For example,
Duke Ernest the Pious of
Gotha in Germany founded a widows' fund for clergy in 1645 and another for teachers in 1662. "Various schemes of provision for ministers' widows were then established throughout Europe at about the start of the eighteenth century, some based on a single premium others based on yearly premiums to be distributed as benefits in the same year." Modern forms of pension systems were first introduced in the late 19th century. Germany was the first country to introduce a universal pension program for employees.
Germany As part of
Otto von Bismarck's social legislation, the
Old Age and Disability Insurance Bill was enacted and implemented in 1889. The Old Age Pension program, financed by a tax on workers, was originally designed to provide a pension annuity for workers who reached the age of 70 years, though this was lowered to 65 years in 1916. Unlike accident insurance and health insurance, this program covered industrial, agrarian, artisans and servants from the start and was supervised directly by the state. Germany's mandatory state pension provisions are based on the pay-as-you-go (or redistributive) model. Funds paid in by contributors (employees and employers) are not saved nor invested but are used to pay current pension obligations.
Ireland There is a history of pensions in
Ireland that can be traced back to
Brehon Law imposing a legal responsibility on the kin group to take care of its members who were aged, blind, deaf, sick or insane. For a discussion on pension funds and early Irish law, see F Kelly,
A Guide to Early Irish Law (Dublin,
Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1988). In 2010, there were over 76,291 pension schemes operating in Ireland. In January 2018, a "total contributions approach" qualification system was announced, effective from March 2018, for those pensioners who reached state pension age after 1 September 2012. The new system requires a person to have 40 years' worth or contributions to receive the full rate and a minimum total period of paid contributions of 520 weeks with ten years' full coverage. The State Pension is payable from age 66 with the age being increased to 67 in 2021 and 68 in 2028.
Spain The history of pensions in Spain began in 1908 with the creation of the National Insurance Institute (INP) and the design of old-age pensions in a free affiliation scheme subsidised by the State. Although in 1919 the pension system was made compulsory and in 1931 an attempt was made to unify the different branches of insurance, the INP failed to ensure that pensions acted as immediate remedial measures for the old-age problem that was evident at the time. Public intervention in social insurance in Spain during these years was greatly determined by the failure of private initiatives such as the Savings and Pension Fund of Barcelona. The Mandatory Workers' Retirement (ROO) was the first compulsory social insurance in Spain and was aimed at wage earners between the ages of 16 and 65 who earned no more than 4,000 pesetas a year. This was followed by the creation of the
Social Security system in 1963, early retirement and the possibility of partial retirement in 1978 and the special regime for self-employed workers in 1985. Various reforms and adjustments have been made over time, such as the 1995 reform that established the sustainability factor and the 2011 reform that raised the retirement age from 65 to 67. Currently, the pension system in Spain is still under debate to ensure its long-term sustainability with proposals such as the implementation of private pension plans and the revision of the conditions of access to public pensions.
United Kingdom striking over pension changes by the government in November 2011 The decline of Feudal systems and formation of national states throughout Europe led to the reemergence of standing armies with their allegiances to states. Consequently, the sixteenth century in England marked the establishment of standardised systems of military pensions. During its 1592–93 session, Parliament established disability payments or "reliefe for Souldiours ... [who] adventured their lives and lost their limbs or disabled their bodies" in the service of the Crown. This pension was again generous by contemporary standards, even though annual pensions were not to exceed ten pounds for "private soldiers", or twenty pounds for a "lieutenant". Then in 1978, The
State Earnings-Related Pension Scheme (SERPS) replaced The Graduated Pension Scheme from 1959, providing a pension related to earnings, in addition to the basic state pension. Employees and employers had the possibility to contribute to it between 6 April 1978 and 5 April 2002, when it was replaced by the
State Second Pension. After the Second World War, the
National Insurance Act 1946 completed universal coverage of social security, introducing a State Pension for everybody on a contributory basis, with men being eligible at 65 and women at 60. The
National Assistance Act 1948 (
11 & 12 Geo. 6. c. 29) formally abolished the poor law, and gave a minimum income to those not paying National Insurance. The early-1990s established the existing framework for state pensions in the
Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act 1992 and Superannuation and other Funds (Validation) Act 1992. Following the highly respected
Goode Report, occupational pensions were covered by comprehensive statutes in the
Pension Schemes Act 1993 and the
Pensions Act 1995. In 2002, the
Pensions Commission was established as a cross-party body to review pensions in the United Kingdom. The first Act to follow was the
Pensions Act 2004 that updated regulation by replacing OPRA with the
Pensions Regulator and relaxing the stringency of minimum funding requirements for pensions while ensuring protection for insolvent businesses. In a major update of the state pension, the
Pensions Act 2007, which aligned and raised retirement ages. Following that, the
Pensions Act 2008 has set up automatic enrolment for
occupational pensions, and a public competitor designed to be a low-cost and efficient fund manager, called the
National Employment Savings Trust (or "Nest").
United States The first "American" pensions came in 1636, when
Plymouth Colony, and subsequently, other colonies such as Virginia, Maryland (1670s) and NY (1690s), offered the first colonial pension. The general assembly of the
Virginia Company followed by approving a resolution known as Virginia Act IX of 1644 stating that "...all hurt or maymed men be relieved and provided for by the several counties, where such men reside or inhabit." Furthermore, during
King Philip's War, otherwise known as the First Indian War, this Act was expanded to widows and orphans in Virginia's Act of 1675. Public pensions got their start with various 'promises', informal and legislated, made to veterans of the
Revolutionary War and, more extensively, the
Civil War. They were expanded greatly, and began to be offered by a number of state and local governments during the early
Progressive Era in the late nineteenth century. Federal civilian pensions were offered under the
Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS), formed in 1920. CSRS provided retirement, disability and survivor benefits for most civilian employees in the U.S. Federal government, until the creation of a new Federal agency, the
Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS), in 1987. Pension plans became popular in the United States during
World War II, when wage freezes prohibited outright increases in workers' pay. The defined benefit plan had been the most popular and common type of
retirement plan in the United States through the 1980s; since that time, defined contribution plans have become the more common type of retirement plan in the United States and many other western countries. In April 2012, the
Northern Mariana Islands Retirement Fund filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. The retirement fund is a
defined benefit type pension plan and was only partially funded by the government, with only $268.4 million in
assets and $911 million in
liabilities. The plan experienced low investment returns and a benefit structure that had been increased without raises in funding. According to
Pensions and Investments, this is "apparently the first" U.S. public pension plan to declare bankruptcy. ==See also== •
Elderly care •
Fiscal sustainability •
Generational accounting •
Pension led funding •
Pension model •
Pension spiking •
Public debt •
Retirement planning •
Social history of soldiers and veterans in the United States •
Social policy Specific: •
Bankruptcy code •
Ham and Eggs Movement, California pension proposal of the 1930s-40s •
Individual Pension Plan (IPP) •
Pension Rights Center •
Provident Fund •
Roth 401(k) •
Universities Superannuation Scheme ==References==