
Inventing Retirement: The Development of Occupational Pensions in Britain
Cambridge University Press, 4/17/1986
EAN 9780521303613, ISBN10: 0521303613
Hardcover, 216 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.6 cm
Language: English
Pension funds now account for a large portion of old-age incomes, of capital ownership, and of employee fringe benefits. A hundred years ago they hardly existed. This book, first published in 1986 by one of Britain's leading business historians, examines the interplay of business, political and social forces in this profound transformation, showing why old-age saving became rooted in the employment contract. The analysis is based on historical materials on pension funds, most of which have never previously been analysed, but this new interpretation is skilfully interwoven with the more familiar story of the development of state welfare and of personnel management. The original perspective of the book will be of interest not only to economists, historians and sociologists, but to practitioners in the field of pensions management and old-age welfare who wish to understand the constraints and opportunities provided for modern pension design by the legacy of the past.
List of tables and figures
Preface
Part I. The Rise of Pensioning
1. Savings, work and old age in Victorian Britain
2. Rival pioneers of collectivism
pensions, the state and employers (1899–1927)
3. The insurance challenge (1927–56)
4. The state
partner or competitor? (1940–78)
5. Competition and professionalisation
the maturing of the pension market (1956–79)
Part II. The Shaping of the Modern Pensions Institution
6. Accident and design in the evolution of pensions
7. Pensions in peril? security, solvency and vesting
8. Designing the benefit structure
9. Retirement
age discrimination or the fruits of prosperity?
Epilogue
Statistical appendix
A note on sources
Notes
Index.