What will retirement look like when today's Grade 1 students finish school in 2036? From tighter regulations and mandatory fund membership to digitised advice and market consolidation, this expert analysis explores how South Africa's retirement landscape is set to transform over the next decade, offering both opportunities and challenges for future retirees.
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Last week, my daughter attended her last formal day of high school. As the famous song goes, it was joy and pain, like sunshine and rain. One highlight of the day was when she and the other matriculants in her class had to say goodbye to their “grade one buddies,” who will only matriculate in 2036. The year 2036, on the one hand, sounded like a date somewhere in the distant future, but at the same time felt remarkably close, especially if you are planning for retirement around that time.
I asked myself the question, what will our retirement landscape look like in 2036 when the grade one buddies matriculate? What are the things that will drive better retirement outcomes, and what are the things that will prevent them? If I had a crystal ball to predict the future, based on my current understanding of the good and the bad of the retirement funding industry, I would predict the following scenario in 2036:
Looking forward to 2036, I see a retirement savings industry that is better regulated, that provides a good trade-off for members between fund control and individual choice by allowing members to move freely between retirement funds, and that will ultimately lead to better retirement outcomes on an individual member basis. The ability of fund members to vote with their feet will keep product and service providers in the retirement industry on their toes as they will have to prove, daily, that they are adding value to the lives of fund members.
* Ladouce is a pension fund lawyer and the author of the book ‘Pensions for Palookas’.
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