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The world is going through tough economic times and some countries are taking extreme measures to reduce debt and bring the budget in order, but most continue to face rising expenditure.
Let's take a look at 10 nations that are paying fortune in pension, according to 24/7 Wall St.
Source: 24/7 Wall St
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Greece
Pension Replacement Rate: 95.7 per cent
Male/Female Retirement Age: 57/57
Male/Female Life Expectancy: 80.9/ 84.2
Sovereign Debt as percentage of GDP: 147.8 per cent
Employment Rate: 58.5 per cent
Greece's public employees get a pretty sweet deal. They get to enjoy nearly a full salary for life beginning at age 57, according to 24/7 Wall St.
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Luxembourg
Pension Replacement Rate: 87.4 per cent
Male/Female Retirement Age: 60/60
Male/Female Life Expectancy: 80.9/84.7
Sovereign Debt as percentage of GDP: 12.6 per cent
Employment Rate: 65.3 per cent
In Luxembourg, once reaching the age of 60, citizens making the median income can begin drawing 87.4 per cent of their income.
Meanwhile, for those making only half the median income, they can take home 97.9 per cent of their salary by age 60.
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Spain
Pension Replacement Rate: 81.2 per cent
Male/Female Retirement Age: 65/65
Male/Female Life Expectancy: 83/86.1
Sovereign Debt as percentage of GDP: 51.7 per cent
Employment Rate: 58.4 per cent
Despite Spain's significant economic woes, the country manages to pay out a sizable pension to employees. Spain's pension pays 81.2 per cent of the salary for those making the median income, half the median income and one-and-a-half times the median income, according to 24/7 Wall St.
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Austria
Pension Replacement Rate: 76.6 per cent
Male/Female Retirement Age: 65/60
Male/Female Life Expectancy: 82.5/85.4
Sovereign Debt as percentage of GDP: 65.8 per cent
Employment Rate: 72.2 per cent
Those making the median income in government can receive more than three-quarters of their salary following retirement, says 24/7 Wall St.
That is an especially good deal for women, who are expected to live for more than 25 years after retiring at 60, it says.
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Italy
Pension Replacement Rate: 64.5 per cent
Male/Female Retirement Age: 59/59
Male/Female Life Expectancy: 82/86.1
Sovereign Debt as percentage of GDP: 109 per cent
Employment Rate: 56.9 per cent
Italians can receive a cushy pension at quite an early age. At age 59, an employee making the median income - along with those making half and one-and-a-half times the median income - can begin receiving a pension paying out 64.5 per cent of an individual's salary.
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Turkey
Pension Replacement Rate: 64.5 per cent
Male/Female Retirement Age: 44.9/41.0
Male/Female Life Expectancy: 75/78.8
Sovereign Debt as percentage of GDP: 42.9 per cent
Employment Rate: 46.8 per cent
The retirement age above isn't a typo - men retire at 44.9 in Turkey and women at 41. Despite the early retirement age, the country still pays out 64.5 per cent of a person's salary for retirement, which on average lasts for more than 30 years for men and nearly 38 years for women, says 24/7 Wall St.
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Slovenia
Pension Replacement Rate: 62.4 per cent
Male/Female Retirement Age: 63/61
Male/Female Life Expectancy: 80.3/84.9
Sovereign Debt as percentage of GDP: 36 per cent
Employment Rate: 65.8 per cent
In Slovenia, men can retire at 63 and women at 61. When they retire, Slovenians are paid 62.4 per cent of their salaries. It gets even better after taxes, where the net pension replacement rate is as high as 85.4 per cent for workers making the median income.
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Finland
Pension Replacement Rate: 57.8 per cent
Male/Female Retirement Age: 65/65
Male/Female Life Expectancy: 82.4/86.1
Sovereign Debt as percentage of GDP: 41.7 per cent
Employment Rate: 68.4 per cent
The retirement age for both men and women in Finland is also 65, but retirees get 57.8 per cent of their income prior to retirement, according to 24/7 Wall St.
Finland currently pays out 12 per cent of its GDP in public pensions, which is the sixth highest out of the 31 countries for which the OECD has data and well higher than the OECD average of 8.4 per cent, it says.
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Portugal
Pension Replacement Rate: 53.9 per cent
Male/Female Retirement Age: 65/65
Male/Female Life Expectancy: 83/85.3
Sovereign Debt as percentage of GDP: 88 per cent
Employment Rate: 65.2 per cent
In Portugal, both men and women retire at 65, an old retirement age compared to the majority of countries on the list. But at retirement, the pension replacement rate is 53.9 per cent for median income workers, and that number rises to 69.2 per cent after taking into account tax benefits, says 24/7 Wall St.
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Czech Republic
Pension Replacement Rate: 50.2 per cent
Male/Female Retirement Age: 61/58.7
Male/Female Life Expectancy: 79/81.8
Sovereign Debt as percentage of GDP: 36.6 per cent
Employment Rate: 65.3 per cent
The Czech Republic manages to pay 61 years old males with a median income more than half his salary prior to retirement. The deal gets even better for women, whose retirement age of 58.7 is the fourth lowest of all of the countries measured by the OECD, according to 24/7 Wall St.