
Positioning Pensions for the Twenty-First Century
First Century
University of Pennsylvania Press
Published on 29. April 1997
Book
Hardback
264 pages
978-0-8122-3391-9 (ISBN)
Description
As the United States comes to terms with the pending insolvency of social security, workers are increasingly pinning their hopes for retirement adequacy on employer-sponsored plans. Positioning Pensions for the Twenty-First Century analyzes the role of pensions in retirement security, examining how these programs will evolve to meet the challenges to our nation's retirement system.
The book brings together a team of leading economists, corporate and labor specialists, actuaries, and policy experts to examine the future of retirement options within the context of emerging labor and business trends and innovative developments in the pension community. They show how a successful public and private pension system can be sustained and strengthened and demonstrate how employer pensions can be configured against a delicately financed social insurance system.
The book's contributions examine where pensions have succeeded and failed over the last several decades and point to positive new developments in the pension arena. Its coverage includes innovative pension options such as hybrid and cash-balance plans; pension funding regulations; changes in GATT laws altering pension insurance premiums; and emerging developments concerning administrative costs and pension obligation bonds. It also features new research on defined contribution plan investment options and includes three case studies of participant-directed pension investments, telling how thousands of workers are allocating their pension savings in 401(k) and related plans.
Positioning Pensions for the Twenty-First Century is essential reading for all managers, employees, and policymakers concerned with designing pension systems that can withstand the challenges of the next decade.
The book brings together a team of leading economists, corporate and labor specialists, actuaries, and policy experts to examine the future of retirement options within the context of emerging labor and business trends and innovative developments in the pension community. They show how a successful public and private pension system can be sustained and strengthened and demonstrate how employer pensions can be configured against a delicately financed social insurance system.
The book's contributions examine where pensions have succeeded and failed over the last several decades and point to positive new developments in the pension arena. Its coverage includes innovative pension options such as hybrid and cash-balance plans; pension funding regulations; changes in GATT laws altering pension insurance premiums; and emerging developments concerning administrative costs and pension obligation bonds. It also features new research on defined contribution plan investment options and includes three case studies of participant-directed pension investments, telling how thousands of workers are allocating their pension savings in 401(k) and related plans.
Positioning Pensions for the Twenty-First Century is essential reading for all managers, employees, and policymakers concerned with designing pension systems that can withstand the challenges of the next decade.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Pennsylvania
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paper over boards
Illustrations
35 tables
Dimensions
Height: 233 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 22 mm
Weight
621 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8122-3391-9 (9780812233919)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Michael S. Gordon is an attorney specializing in the practice of ERISA and employee benefits law in Washington, D.C. Olivia S. Mitchell is International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans Professor in the Department of Insurance and Risk Management at the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania. Marc M. Twinney is a Fellow of the Society of Actuaries and served on the 1995 Advisory Council to Social Security.
Content
Preface
1. Introduction: Assessing the Challenges to the Pension System
PART I. DEFINED BENEFIT AND DEFINED CONTRIBUTION PLANS
2. A Fresh Look at Defined Benefit Plans: An Employer Perspective
3. Cash Balance Pension Plans
4. Risk Aversion and Pension Investment Choices
5. Investment of Assets in Self-Directed Retirement Plans
6. Are Women Conservative Investors? Gender Differences in Participant-Directed Pension Investments
PART II. EMERGING PENSION ISSUES
7. Funding of Defined Benefit Pension Plans
8. Corporate Governance and Pension Plans
9. Using Pension Funding Bonds in Defined Benefit Pension Portfolios
10. Public Pension Plan Efficiency
PART III. CROSS CURRENTS IN NATIONAL RETIREMENT INCOME POLICY
11. Analytical Framework for Retirement Policy Decisions
12. Reforming Social Security?
13. Individual Social Security Retirement Accounts
Contributors
Index
1. Introduction: Assessing the Challenges to the Pension System
PART I. DEFINED BENEFIT AND DEFINED CONTRIBUTION PLANS
2. A Fresh Look at Defined Benefit Plans: An Employer Perspective
3. Cash Balance Pension Plans
4. Risk Aversion and Pension Investment Choices
5. Investment of Assets in Self-Directed Retirement Plans
6. Are Women Conservative Investors? Gender Differences in Participant-Directed Pension Investments
PART II. EMERGING PENSION ISSUES
7. Funding of Defined Benefit Pension Plans
8. Corporate Governance and Pension Plans
9. Using Pension Funding Bonds in Defined Benefit Pension Portfolios
10. Public Pension Plan Efficiency
PART III. CROSS CURRENTS IN NATIONAL RETIREMENT INCOME POLICY
11. Analytical Framework for Retirement Policy Decisions
12. Reforming Social Security?
13. Individual Social Security Retirement Accounts
Contributors
Index