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Social Security Reform: Financial and Political Issues in International Perspective

Social Security Reform: Financial and Political Issues in International Perspective

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Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 4/4/2005
EAN 9780521844956, ISBN10: 0521844959

Hardcover, 384 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.5 cm
Language: English

As population aging has become increasingly acute in many countries, the debate over how to reform often creaking public pension systems has gathered momentum. In many cases, this debate has become politicized and the focus on some of the underlying economic issues has been lost. This volume hopes to redress some of this imbalance. It begins by examining the rationale behind why public pension systems were introduced originally - out of fear that individuals do not adequately save for retirement. It then systematically examines different aspects of reforming these systems. It covers the fiscal repercussions of reform, the implications of the baby boom on asset returns in the years ahead, the political economy of the reform process, and finally the risk-sharing implications that are inherent in reform. An important additional goal of this volume is to make it accessible to as wide an audience as possible: students, academics, and policy makers.

Preface
Contributors
Introduction Robin Brooks and Assaf Razin
Part I. Aging Populations and the Need for Social Security Reform
1. The joint Japanese, EU, and US demographic transitions - the roles of capital flows, immigration, and policy Hans Fehr, Sabine Jokisch and Laurence Kotlikoff
2. Will Social Security and Medicare remain viable as the US population is aging? An update Henning Bohn
Part II. Undersaving as a Rationale for Mandatory Social Security Programs
3. Self-control and saving for retirement David Laibson, Andrea Repetto and Jeremy Tobacman
Part III. Investing Public Pensions in the Stock Market
4. Social Security investment in equities Peter Diamond and John Geanakoplos
5. Investing public pensions in the stock market
implications for risk sharing, capital formation, and public policy in the developed and developing world Deborah Lucas
6. The risk-sharing implications of alternative social security arrangements Kjetil Storesletten, Chris Telmer, and Amir Yaron
Part IV. Financial Markets and Social Security Reform
7. Asset market effects of the baby boom and Social Security reform Robin Brooks
8. Demographic structure and asset returns James Poterba
9. Will bequests attenuate the predicted meltdown in stock prices when baby boomers retire? Andrew Abel
Part V. Political Economy Aspects of Social Security Reform
10. Aging and the private versus public pension controversy
a political-economy perspective Assaf Razin and Efraim Sadka
11. How would you like to reform your pension system? The opinions of German and Italian citizens Tito Boeri, Axel-Boersch-Supan, and Guido Tabellini
Index.