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Development of the UK longevity market. Rajeev Shah 9 December 2009. Agenda. Background Economic issues Corporate issues Financial issues Longevity Market Focus of longevity research. Agenda. Background Economic issues Corporate issues Financial issues Longevity Market
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Development of the UK longevity market Rajeev Shah 9 December 2009
Agenda • Background • Economic issues • Corporate issues • Financial issues • Longevity Market • Focus of longevity research
Agenda • Background • Economic issues • Corporate issues • Financial issues • Longevity Market • Focus of longevity research
BackgroundImprovements in longevity since 1855 Annual average rate of improvement in longevity Males aged 65 – 74 from 1855 - 2005
Agenda • Background • Economic issues • Financial issues • Corporate issues • Longevity Market • Focus of longevity research
Economic issuesOverview • Aging population • Dependency ratio increasing • Increasing pensioner population relative to working population • Health and old age care costs increasing • Healthy vs unhealthy life spans • State pension costs increasing • Increased burden on state / tax payer
Agenda • Background • Economic issues • Corporate issues • Financial issues • Longevity Market • Focus of longevity research
Corporate issues • Aging workforce • NRAs increasing • Age discrimination legislation introduced • Future pension provision more expensive • Deficit on current final salary pension scheme • Impact depends on size of scheme relative to size of Company • Pension matters affecting commercial issues
Agenda • Background • Economic issues • Financial issues • Corporate issues • Longevity Market • Focus of longevity research
Financial issuesOverview • Population living longer • Increases the cost of: • Annuities purchased by individuals • Pension funds: DC – individual benefit decreases • Pension funds: DB – shortfall in funding arises • Insurance companies offering annuity benefits etc. • Benefits provided by certain charitable institutions • Reduces the cost of: • Term / endowment assurance policies • Prepaid funeral plans
Financial IssuesImpact on annuity rates of male aged 60 • Life expectancy of male aged 60 in 2009 increased by 4 years from that expected in 1992 • Assuming interest rate of 5% p.a. and 3% p.a. inflation, £100,000 at age 60 will give an annual income of: • £4,675 p.a. now, assuming life expectancy of 28.5 years • £5,215 p.a. should life expectancy be assumed to be 24.7 years (as projected in 1992) • Increased life expectancy => decrease in annual income of approximately 12% • Require an additional 1% p.a. investment return (from age 60) to achieve comparable income. • Effect exaggerated, since interest rates fallen significantly since early 1990s => annuity costs increased significantly
Agenda • Background • Economic issues • Corporate issues • Financial issues • Longevity Market • Focus of longevity research
Longevity MarketDrivers of longevity market • Uncertainty about future longevity • Significant financial implications if longevity is different to expected • desire to protect against changes • development of longevity market
Longevity MarketLongevity Products • Buyout and Bulk Buyout • Longevity swaps • Other more complex products developing: • Company taking over as sponsoring employer • Buyout, with investment strategy determined by client who retains investment risk • Limited term cashflow cover and Funding Level Protection • Innovation and risk appetite helped by longevity research
Agenda • Background • Financial issues • Economic issues • Corporate issues • Longevity Market • Focus of longevity research
Focus of longevity researchDrivers of Mortality Improvement • Law of diminishing returns at young ages • Changing lifestyle • Smoking • Obesity • Advances in medical technology • Heart disease • Cancers • Reversal of aging process
Focus of longevity research Mortality improvements for main causes of death Source: “Exploring the Critical Path”, Critical Illness Trends Research Group
Focus of longevity research Causes of death Source: ONS
Focus of longevity research Will mortality continue to improve? Professor Jay Olshanksy University of Illinois, Chicago Olshanksy argues that mortality will not continue to improve at its current rate. The main reasons he gives are obesity, the spread of disease and, most importantly, the existence of biomechanical limits on our lifespan. Professor Shripad Tuljapurkar Stanford University, California Study assumes that lifespans increase in line with current trends until 2010, but that anti-ageing technologies would then become available that would prolong life much further. These drugs and therapies would cause mortality to decline five times faster than historical rates between 2010 and 2030, before normal service was resumed.
Differences in mortality bysocio-economic class • Mortality varies by social-economic class • Consider the following class definitions:
Life expectancy and social class Source: ONS
Life expectancy and social class Source: ONS
Longevity by social classImpact on costing • Life expectancies of Male aged 65 (source ONS): -Class I (Professional) 18.3 years -Class V (Unskilled manual) 14.1 years • Significant difference in cost of providing an annuity or a pension to the different classes • Insurance companies and pension schemes use additional information to improve estimate of costs / pricing.
Longevity by social classExplanations for differences • Lifestyle • Smoking • Eating habits • Alcohol consumption • Wealth • Education • Access to medical services • Social networks • Nature of employment • Injury risks • Long-term health risks
Longevity by social classProxy Factors for Socio-Economic Status • Indicators of socio-economic status could include: • The individual’s occupation • The industry in which the employer operates • The individual’s salary • The amount of benefit (but there are problems associated with using this) • The individual's geographical location (postcode)
Regional Mortality Differencesin the UK: Cold to Hot Data Source: ONS Key Population & Vital Statistics 2003-2004
SMRs in the UK: Cold to Hot Data Source: BW Model
SMRs in London: Cold to Hot Data Source: BW Model
SMRs in London: Cold to Hot Merton: e65 = 18.81 SMR: 77.09% Dagenham: e65 = 16.33 SMR: 105.86% Glasgow City: e65 = 16.20 SMR: 107.69% but… Broomhill in Glasgow: e65 = 18.06 SMR: 84.62% Data Source: BW Model
Financial and Economic issues of increasing longevity Rajeev Shah 9 December 2009