In this new conference volume from the National Academy of
Social Insurance, experts offer differing views on what changes
will, and must, occur to ensure the continuing viability of Social
Security, retirement benefits, unemployment insurance, Medicare,
and health security programs. The book opens with a general
overview of how economic and political forces will shape the future
of social insurance. In the chapters that follow, contributors
discuss and debate a full range of related topics, including future
Social Security investment returns, the changing face of private
retirement plans, insuring longevity risk in pensions and Social
Security, issues in unemployment insurance, long-term financing,
governance, and markets for Medicare, and health care for the
underserved and uninsured. Contributors include William C. Dudley
(Goldman Sachs), Richard Berner (Morgan Stanley Dean Witter),
Kilolo Kijakazi (Center on Budget and Policy Priorities), Fay Lomax
Cook (Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University),
Lawrence Jacobs (University of Minnesota), Jack VanDerhei (Fox
School of Business Management, Temple University) Craig Copeland
(Employee Benefit Research Institute), Jeffery R. Brown (John F.
Kennedy School of Government, Harvard), Janet Norwood (1993-96
Advisory Council on Unemployment Compensation), Marilyn Moon (Urban
Institute), Sheila Burke (Smithsonian Institution and Kennedy
School of Government, Harvard), Mark Schlesinger (Yale), Gerard
Anderson (Johns Hopkins University), Lauren LeRoy (Grantmakers in
Health), Ruth Riedel (Alliance Healthcare Foundation of San Diego),
and Henrie M. Treadwell (W. K. Kellog Foundations Community
Voices).
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