Estonian Parliament on Dec. 13 passed a state pension insurance bill that foresees indexation of pensions
Published:
29 December 2000 y., Friday
Estonian Parliament on Dec. 13 passed a state pension insurance bill that foresees indexation of pensions, one week after thousands of Tallinn pensioners protested against low retirement income in front of the parliament building.
Starting from year 2002 the size of a pension will depend upon the consumer price index and the social tax paid by a person before reaching pension age. Every April the pension amount will be multiplied by the arithmetical mean of those two factors. According to the Bank of Estonia, the CPI in 1998 and 1999 was 8.3 percent and 3.3 percent, respectively. The bank forecast 4 percent to 4.5 percent CPI for the year 2000. Today an average pension barely exceeds 1,000 kroons ($58); the retirement age for men will be 63 years starting next year and for women from the year 2016.
The first step of the pension reform project states that from 2005 a certain amount of salary will go into the pension fund to provide for a person's pension after retirement.
Today 20 percent of collected social taxes are meant for pensions; statistics show a ratio of 1.7 working people providing the pension for one retired person. Indrek Holst, Uhispank Life Insurance's president said that this cannot go on due to the present demographic situation in Estonia. "The amount of money for pensioners has always been limited, and now it seems to decrease," said Holst.
Šaltinis:
baltictimes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The European Commission announced today the award of three of the six contracts for the procurement of Galileo’s initial operational capability.
more »
The need for energy that does not come from oil, equality between the sexes and more spending on education are just some of the things people have requested using the Parliament's choice boxes.
more »
This week marks the launch of the tenth Interest Rate Challenge, the competition designed to give 16 to 18 year old students across the UK the opportunity to take on the role of the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee and set monetary policy for the UK to meet the inflation target of 2.0%.
more »
One California company unveiled a solution - a prototype energy station that swaps electric vehicles' empty batteries for fully charged ones.
more »
NASA officials have confirmed that the space shuttle Atlantis was hit by a piece of debris that nicked part of its heat shield.
more »
Atlantis carried a seven-member crew that was scheduled to perform five spacewalks to install and repair instruments and replace positioning gyroscopes on the telescope, which orbits 350 miles above Earth.
more »
Artificial grass maker Ten Cate is developing an intelligent pitch in the Netherlands.
more »
Russian scientist Olga Speranskaya has taken on one very tough job - to help clean up the vast network of toxic chemical sites in the former Soviet states.
more »
European politicians will be visiting schools around Europe as part of ‘spring day’ 2009.
more »
The current experiments show a subject an image and then reconstruct that image based on scans of the brain's visual cortex.
more »
The children of people who come to live in Europe will have to learn the language of the country they enter from pre-school age.
more »