Reforming Pensions
Principles and Policy Choices
Nicholas Barr author Peter Diamond author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:23rd Oct '08
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Mandatory pensions are a worldwide phenomenon. However, with fixed contribution rates, monthly benefits, and retirement ages, pension systems are not consistent with three long-run trends: declining mortality, declining fertility, and earlier retirement. Many systems need reform. This book gives an extensive nontechnical explanation of the economics of pension design. The theoretical arguments have three elements: * Pension systems have multiple objectives--consumption smoothing, insurance, poverty relief, and redistribution. Good policy needs to bear them all in mind. * Good analysis should be framed in a second-best context-- simple economic models are a bad guide to policy design in a world with imperfect information and decision-making, incomplete markets and taxation. * Any choice of pension system has risk-sharing and distributional consequences, which the book recognizes explicitly. Barr and Diamond's analysis includes labor markets, capital markets, risk sharing, and gender and family, with comparison of PAYG and funded systems, recognizing that the suitable level of funding differs by country. Alongside the economic principles of good design, policy must also take account of a country's capacity to implement the system. Thus the theoretical analysis is complemented by discussion of implementation, and of experiences, both good and bad, in many countries, with particular attention to Chile and China.
It is required reading for anyone who wants to either become or remain a specialist in both the theory and practice of pension reform around the world. * Lans Bovenberg Journal of Pension *
[A] well informaed, timely and authoritative examination of the best way to meet the challenge of pension provision in an ageing society. * The Journal of Ageing and Society *
- Winner of Written by Peter Diamond, winner of the 2010 Nobel Prize for Economics.
ISBN: 9780195311303
Dimensions: 157mm x 236mm x 25mm
Weight: 689g
368 pages