Vatican City, 20 February 2015 (VIS) –
The following is the full text of the communique issued today by the
Managing Board and the College of Auditors of the Vatican Pension
Fund:
“Since for some months, and amplified
by press reports, alarming data has been circulating regarding the
situation of the Vatican Pensions Fund and on the sustainability of
honouring the commitments undertaken towards present and future
subscribers, the Managing Board of the Fund and the College of
Auditors consider it opportune to officially communicate the
actuarial situation, assets and income of the aforementioned Fund, as
it appears in the actuarial Technical Financial Statements drawn up
by the actuary and the Financial Statements regularly approved by the
Secretary of State.
With regard to the actuarial aspect,
there is a substantial balance between available resources and
commitments to current and future employees, due also to
interventions (approved by the Secretary of State following proposals
by the Managing Board) both in terms of contributions (increase of
rates throughout the years up to the current rate of 26% on the total
of taxable income) and in relation to performance (increase of two
years of working life, raising the age of retirement to 67 for
laypersons and 72 for clergy and persons religious.
The Statements also show,
throughout the years, the solidity of the assets and financial
structure of the Fund itself. The funding ratio of the Pensions Fund
is 0.95%. From a strictly income-based perspective, the economic and
financial situation of the institution records a gradual increase of
financial and real estate resources both in terms of capital
resources which, from 1993 to 2013 increased on average from €
22,256,196 per year, and in terms of the upward trend in net profit,
which during the last 6 years has passed from € 23,583,882 to €
26,866,657, sums sufficient to cover the current costs of pensions.
To complete the picture, the Fund’s
assets on 31 December 2014 were recorded at € 477,668,000. Adding
the budget surplus for 2015, estimated to be around € 27,140,000, a
net worth by 31 December 2015 of over 504 million euros may be
hypothesised, confirming the real solidity of the Fund, which has
progressed from an initial budget of 10 billion of the old Italian
lire in 1993 to over 500 million euros in little more than twenty
years”.
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