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🇫🇮 

Finland’s Pension System

 vs. 🇺🇸 

U.S. Social Security

Feature🇫🇮 Finland🇺🇸 United States
System TypeTwo-tier system: 1. Earnings-related 2. National pensionSingle-tier: Earnings-based Social Security
AdministrationMultiple earnings-related pension providers + Kela (national)Social Security Administration (SSA), federal system
Eligibility– Earnings-based: Any employment – National: Residence-based– Must have 10 years (40 credits) of work
Retirement Age– Flexible: Age 64–69 (increasing gradually) – Early as 63– Full: Age 66–67 (depending on birth year) – Early: 62
Benefit Amount– 50–60% of final salary (earnings-based) – National pension if low income (~€735/month)– Average monthly: ~$1,900/month (2024) – Max: ~$4,873/mo
IndexingAdjusted for wage growth and inflation (wage-weighted index)Adjusted annually by inflation (CPI)
Survivors’/DisabilityIncluded in the systemIncluded: disability and survivors’ benefits
Financing– Contributions: ~24–25% of wages split between employers/employees – Fully funded or pay-as-you-go depending on fund– Payroll tax: 12.4% of wages (split 50/50, subject to cap)
InvestmentFunds are invested in national pension funds and marketsU.S. Trust Fund holds Treasury securities (non-traded)
CoverageUniversal (incl. part-time, self-employed, and students)Limited to formal employment with taxable income
PortabilityFully portable across employers; no minimum job durationRequires minimum work duration (10 years/40 credits)



🧾 Summary of Key Differences

Category🇫🇮 Finland🇺🇸 U.S.
Universal accessYes, via national pension even without long work historyNo – must meet minimum work requirements
System structureMulti-tiered (residency + earnings)Single-tier (earnings only)
GenerosityTypically replaces 50–60% of income for career workersAverages ~40% income replacement
Retirement flexibilityMore flexible retirement optionsLimited flexibility
Public trust & solvencyFinancially stable with invested fundsFacing long-term solvency concerns after 2035

📚 References

Back to National Happiness

Back to Sweep the Midterms