Mortality Rates Increased 1.2% Between 2014 and 2015
Between
2014 and 2015, mortality rates increased 1.2%, according to the Society of
Actuaries’ (SOA’s) analysis of publicly available data from the Social Security
Administration through 2013, and its analysis of preliminary 2014 and 2015
data. This MP-2017 finding is the first year-over-year mortality rate increase
since 2005, SOA says.
As a result of the slight decline in life expectancies, pension plan
obligations can be reduced between 0.7% to 1.0%, SOA says. SOA says that the
increase in mortality is due to an increase in eight of the 10 causes of death,
as reported by the Centers for Disease Control. For example, the life
expectancy for a 65-year-old male pension plan participant in 2017 declined to
85.6 years, down from 85.8 in 2016. For women in that time period, their life
expectancies dropped from 87.8 years to 87.6 years.
“The SOA is a data-driven organization committed to annually updating the
mortality improvement scale as new data is available,” says Dale Hall, managing
director of research for the SOA. “MP-2017 gives pension actuaries and plan
sponsors current information to measure retirement obligations and make
forward-looking mortality improvement assumptions. However, every plan is
different, and it’s important for actuaries and plan sponsors to perform their
own calculations and decide how to reflect the impact of emerging mortality
changes in their own plan valuations.”
The full MP-2017 report can be downloaded here.