According to Crisil, by 2030, if at all the private sector coverage increases to 70 per cent (best case scenario) or 6.3 crore (8 per cent of the total retirees) this will increase the government's pension burden by 120 basis points to 3.4 per cent of GDP from around 2.2 per cent currently, assuming each pensioner gets Rs 2,000 every month.
In the worst-case scenario, if private sector coverage stays chronically low at its current level of 8 per cent by 2030, the government will have to formulate a pension scheme to support the entire population of the old.
This will raise the fiscal burden to a high of 4.1 per cent of GDP, assuming a monthly payout of Rs 1,000 per pensioner or half the amount in the best-case scenario, Crisil said in its report.
"In either event, the fiscal burden of pension ranging from 3.4 to 4.1 per cent of GDP in 2030 is high.
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According to Crisil, nearly 10 crore elderly will triple to 30 crore by 2050 or every fifth citizen will be a sexagenarian compared to every 12th now.
However, the report warns that going by the current pension coverage in the private sector, most of these elderly will not have any social security net unless such a net is not built from now by increasing the pension coverage to the private-sector workforce manifold.
Government employees joining the workforce after 2004 are covered under the defined contribution formula of the National Pension System (NPS).
The NPS, which has almost been a non-starter until now, can be popularised by way of increasing awareness and incentivizing the distributors, says the report.
Commenting on mutual fund houses like Reliance, which recently got approval to launch its maiden equity-oriented pension scheme giving tax benefits to investors, Kudva said, "We may see a few more players coming in if the government makes investment into the pension schemes to EEE (exempt, exempt, exempt) from the currently existing EET (exempt, exempt, tax) provisions".