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The Oxford Handbook of Pensions and Retirement Income
Gordon L. Clark, Alicia H. Munnell, and J. Michael Orszag
936 pages
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Numerous tables and figures
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246x171mm
978-0-19-927246-4
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Hardback
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20 July 2006
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- A comprehensive review of pensions and retirement income research and practice
- In each chapter, using a uniform structure, leading researchers and practitioners survey their area of expertise
- Clear book structure ensures ease of reference
- Examines implications for current and future provision of pension and retirement income of demographic ageing, the changing financial circumstances of nation states, and globalization
The Oxford Handbook of Pensions and Retirement Income is the only comprehensive review available of the latest research, policy-related tools, analytical methods and techniques, and major theoretical frameworks and principles of pension and retirement income. Featuring over forty contributions from leading academic and professional experts, the handbook draws on research from a range of academic disciplines to reflect on the implications for current and future provision of pension and retirement income of demographic ageing, the changing financial circumstances of nation states, and globalization. An indispensable desk reference for researchers and practitioners in the area, it is also essential for policymakers and those with broad interests which
include this very important area.
Contributors:
William C. Apgar, Camila Arza, Anthony Asher, Vickie L. Bajtelsmit, Armando Barrientos, Rob Bauer, Gary Burtless, John Y. Campbell, Gordon L. Clark, Adam Creighton, E Philip Davis, Johan J. De Deken, Zhu Xiao Di, Richard Disney, Bernhard Ebbinghaus, Robin Ellison, Ewald Engelen, Gosta Esping-Andersen, Teresa Ghilarducci, Tryggvi Thor Herbertsson, Roy P.M.M. Hoevenaars, Tony Hope, Yu-Wei Hu, Paul Johnson, André Laboul, Florence Legros, David McCarthy, Warren McGillivray, Carmelo Mesa-Lago, Marilyn Moon, Alicia H. Munnell, John Myles, David Neumark, Naohiro Ogawa, J. Michael Orszag, Hanam S. Phang, John Piggott, Eduard Ponds, James Poterba, Neha Sand, Steven Sass, Julian Savulescu, Tom B.M.
Steenkamp, Annika Sundén, Noriyuki Takayama, Patricia Thane, Ian Tonks, Bart van Riel, Steven F. Venti, Luis M. Viceira, Noel Whiteside, Geoffrey Whittington, David A. Wise, and Juan Yermo.Readership: Academics, Researchers, and Grarduate Students of Finance, Economics, Business, and Law; Industry and Public Policy practitioners specializing in pension provision, management, and policy planning; Pension consultants and actuaries.
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Gordon L. Clark, Halford Mackinder Professor of Geography, University of Oxford, Alicia H. Munnell, Peter F. Drucker Chair in Management Sciences , Carroll School of Management, Boston College, and J. Michael Orszag, Head of Research, Towers Watson Worldwide Contributors: North America: William C. Apgar, Lecturer in Public Policy, Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, and Senior Scholar, Joint Center for Housing Studies, Vickie L. Bajtelsmit, Professor, Department of Finance and Real Estate, Colorado State University and First Community Bank Faculty Fellow, Gary Burtless
holds the Whitehead Chair in Economic Studies, Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C., John Y. Campbell, Otto Eckstein Professor of Applied Economics, Harvard University, Zhu Xiao Di, Research Analyst, Harvard University's Joint Center for Housing Studies, Teresa Ghilarducci, Associate Professor of Economics, and director, Higgins Labor Research Center, University of Notre Dame, Warren McGillivray, overseas Policy Associate, Caledon Institute, Ottawa, Canada, Carmelo Mesa-Lago, Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of Economics and Latin American Studies, University of Pittsburgh, John Myles, Canada Research Chair and Professor of Sociology, University of Toronto, and Visiting Research Scholar, Statistics Canada, Marilyn Moon, Vice President and Director, Health Program at the American Institutes for Research, David Neumark, Senior Fellow, Public Policy Institute of California, James Poterba, Mitsui Professor of Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Director, Public Economics Research Program, National Bureau of Economic Research, USA, Steven Sass, Associate Director for Research, Center for Retirement Research, Boston College, Steven F. Venti, DeWalt H.Ankeny Professor of Economic Policy, and Professor of Economics, Dartmouth College, Luis M. Viceira, Associate Professor, Harvard Business School, David A. Wise, John F. Stambaugh Professor of Political Economy, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard
University,
Europe: Camila Arza, Jean Monnet Fellow, Robert Schuman Centre (European University Institute, Florence), and researcher, Economics Department of the Latin American School of Social Sciences (FLACSO-Argentina), Armando Barrientos, Senior Lecturer in Public Economics and Development, and Senior Researcher, Chronic Poverty Research Centre, Institute for Development Policy and Management, University of Manchester, UK, Rob Bauer, Manager, Investment Research department, ABP Investments, and Professor of Finance, Maastricht University, the Netherlands, E Philip Davis, Professor of Economics and Finance, Brunel University, Johan J. De Deken, Lecturer, Department of Sociology, University of Amsterdam, Richard Disney, Professor of Economics, University of Nottingham, Bernhard Ebbinghaus, Professor of Macrosociology, Faculty for Social Sciences, University of Mannheim, Germany, Robin Ellison, partner, Pinsent Masons, Ewald Engelen, researcher, Scientific Council for Policy Research, the Hague, Gøsta Esping-Andersen, Professor of Political and Social Sciences, Universitat Pompeu Fabra (Barcelona), Tryggvi Thor Herbertsson, Director of the Institute of Economic Studies, and, professor in economics, University of Iceland, Roy P.M.M. Hoevenaars strategic and tactical issues group, research department, ABP Investments, Tony Hope, Professor of Medical Ethics, University of Oxford, Honorary Consultant Psychiatrist,
and Director, Ethox, Yu-Wei Hu, Brunel University, UK, Paul Johnson, Professor of Economic History, and Deputy Director, London School of Economics, André Laboul, Head of the Financial Affairs Division, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Florence Legros, Professor of Economics, University Dauphine, Paris, David McCarthy, Lecturer of Finance, Tanaka Business School, Imperial College London, Eduard Ponds, Head of Strategy, Finance Department, ABP Pension Fund, the Netherlands, Julian Savulescu, Uehiro Chair in Practical Ethics, and Director of the Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, Oxford University, Tom B.M. Steenkamp, Head of Allocation and Research, ABP
Investments, Annika Sundén, Senior Economist, Swedish Social Insurance Agency, Patricia Thane, Leverhulme Professor of Contemporary British History, and Director of the Centre for Contemporary British History, Institute of Historical Research, University of London, Ian Tonks, Director, Xfi Centre for Finance and Investment, University of Exeter, Bart van Riel, Senior Policy Officer, the Netherlands Social-Economic Council (SER), Noel Whiteside, Professor of Comparative Public Policy, and Senior Fellow at the Institute of Governance and Public Management, Warwick University (UK), Geoffrey Whittington member, International Accounting Standards Board, Juan Yermo, Financial Affairs Division, OECD,
Asia: Naohiro Ogawa, Professor of Economics and Deputy Director of the Population Research Institute, Nihon University, Tokyo, Hanam S. Phang, Senior Fellow, Korea Labor Institute, Neha Sand, economist, the Watson Wyatt research centre, Delhi,
Australasia: Anthony Asher, Senior Actuarial Advisor, Australian Prudential Regulation Authority, and Visiting Fellow, Macquarie University, Adam Creighton, Senior Analyst, Reserve Bank of Australia, and Research Associate, Centre for Pensions and Superannuation, John Piggott, Professor of Economics and Director of the Centre for Pensions and Superannuation, University of New South Wales, Noriyuki Takayama, Professor of Economics, Hitotsubashi
University, Tokyo,
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"The Oxford Handbook of Pensions and Retirement Income is sure to become an invaluable reference for researchers and students, actuaries and benefits counselors, corporate and labor-oriented analysts, and indeed all in the pension design and financial services business. Volume contributors are leading authorities who provide a systematic and thorough review of the diverse issues that arise in the structuring, management, regulation, and understanding of public and private pension systems. Chapters include a diverse set of financial, economic, historical, and institutional perspectives shaping the key institutions on which so many millions rely for financial security around the globe. This book will be a welcome addition to my bookshelf." - Olivia
S. Mitchell, International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans Professor; Executive Director of The Pension Research Council; The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania "This is a fascinating and incredibly useful book for anyone interested in the problem of retirement income provision. Its 42 chapters by the leading thinkers and researchers in the subject cover almost every imaginable topic, from the history of retirement plans, through current structures and problems to the future. By producing this book, Clark, Munnell, and Orszag have provided an invaluable resource." - Michael J. Clowes, author of The Money Flood: How Pension Funds Revolutionized Investing "In terms of scale and scope, this is surely the most comprehensive
handbook on pensions and retirement ever compiled. This makes it a 'must have' for every serious student of this fascinating field." - Keith Ambachtsheer, Director, Rotman International Centre for Pension Management, University of Toronto "Today, there are only few accurate overviews on the actual state of pension issues in an international comparative context. With respect to this fact, The Oxford Handbook of Pension and Retirement Income closes an obvious gap between theoretical concepts and practical experiences using a reader-friendly format. Combining leadership experience with practical background from comparative viewpoints, the authors provide useful insights into the different approaches and the common goal of pension systems worldwide. Many thanks to
the publishers of this exciting oeuvre for an important contribution to modern socio-economic discussions on pension systems." - Dr. Werner Nussbaum, Legal expert for pension systems, Berne/Seoul
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Introduction
1: Gordon L. Clark, Alicia H. Munnell, J. Michael Orszag: The Agenda
2: Gordon L. Clark, Alicia H. Munnell, J. Michael Orszag: Pension and Retirement Income in a Global Environment
I Retirement in Context
Creating Modern Retirement
3: Pat Thane: The History of Retirement
4: Camila Arza and Paul Johnson: The Development of Public Pensions from 1889 to the 1990s
5: Steven Sass: The Development of Employer Retirement Income Plans: from the Nineteenth Century to 1980
6: Ewald Engelen: Changing Work Patters and the Reorganization of Occupational Pensions
7: Vickie L. Bajtelsmit: Gender, the Family, and the Economy
8: Bart van Riel, Johan De Deken, and Eduard Ponds: Social Solidarity
The Economic Context
9: Naohiro Ogawa and Noriyuki Takayama: Demography and Ageing
10: Florence Legros: Life-cycle Options and Preferences
11: Philip Davis and Yu-Wei Hu: Funding, Saving and Economic Growth
II Public Retirement Plans
State Old-Age Pension Programs
12: Warren McGillivray: Structure and Performance of Defined Benefit Schemes
13: Adam Creighton and John Piggott: The Structure and Performance of Mandated Pensions
14: Richard Disney: Actuarial-based Public Pension Systems
Entitlements and Pensions
15: Robin Ellison: Citizenship, Entitlement, and Mobility
16: David Wise: Early Retirement
17: Marilyn Moon: Meeting Health and Long-term Care Needs in Retirement
III Employment-Sponsored Retirement Plans
Structure of Employer-Sponsored Pensions
18: Alicia H. Munnell: Employer-Sponsored Plans: The Shift from Defined Benefit to Defined Contribution
19: Teresa Ghilarducci: Organized Labor and Pensions
20: Michael Orszag and Neha Sand: Corporate Finance and Capital Markets
Pension Plan Investments
21: Rob Bauer, Roy Hoevenaars and Tom Steenkamp: Asset Liability Management
22: 1. John Y. Campbell and Luis M. Viceira: Strategic Asset Allocation for Pension Plans
23: Ian Tonks: Pension Fund Management and Investment Performance
Pension Plan Governance
24: Gordon L. Clark: Regulation of pension fund governance
25: André Laboul and Juan Yermo: Regulatory Principles and Institutions
26: Geoffrey Whittington: Accounting Standards for Pension Costs
IV Individual and Household Retirement Provision
Individual Pnesions, Insurance, and Saving
27: David McCarthy: Occupational pension scheme design
28: James Poterba: Annuities, Risk, and Longevity
29: Tryggvi Thor Herbertsson: Personal Pensions and Markets
Individual and Household Retirement Planning
30: Steven F. Venti: Choice, Behavior, and Retirement Saving
31: Bill Apgar and Zhu Xiao Di: Housing Wealth and Retirement Savings
32: Julian Savulescu and Tony Hope: The Elderly and Ethical Financial Decision-Making
V Looking Ahead
Prospective Models
33: Carmela Mesa-Lago: Structure Pension Reform - privatisation - in Latin America
34: Noel Whiteside: Private Pensions and Public Policy: the Public-Private Divide Reappraised
35: Annika Sundén: Unending Work
Challenges
36: David Neumark: Productivity, Compensation, and Retirement
37: Gary Burtless: Poverty and Inequality
38: Bernhard Ebbinghaus: The Politics of Reform: Managing Interest Group Conflicts
Emerging Economies
39: Armando Barrientos: Pensions for Development and Poverty Reduction
40: Hanam S. Phang: Retirement Income Systems in Asia
41: Anthony Asher: Pensions in Africa
Coda
42: Gøsta Esping-Andersen and John Myles: Sustainable and Equitable Retirement in a Life Course Perspective
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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