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On the premise that pension provision in Europe will dramatically
change over the next few decades, this book concentrates on the
funded component of pension wealth, and specifically on annuities -
financial products that, on the basis of actuarial equivalence,
allow the conversion of wealth into a lifelong stream of income.
Developing an Annuity Market in Europe provides an analysis of how
longevity and return risks are dealt with, besides considering key
features from both household and insurance company perspectives. It
takes account of the fact that annuity markets are expected to
attract much interest in future years given the prospective cuts in
public pension expenditure. In order to fill the gap between
shrinking pensions and desired retirement consumption, the authors
argue, annuities must be well regulated and supplied with
financially attractive products. These conditions hardly exist
today: thin markets and scant interest prevail, information is
incomplete and imperfect, products show significant disparities.
The contributors to this book explore the causes of present
malfunctioning and examine the changes that may give annuities a
new and vital function, which, along with greater competition and
greater regulation may significantly alter the present scene of
pension finance. Finally, the book offers an overview of regulatory
issues including transparency, prudential provisions, appropriate
levels of guarantees, and administrative costs. This important and
timely book will be invaluable to anyone interested in annuities,
from practitioners through to students, researchers and academics
concerned in financial or public economics.
Pension Systems enters into the current lively debate on European
pensions. The focus of the book is the analysis of public
intervention in individuals' retirement choice, its rationale and
the desirability of legislation introducing a sizeable and
compulsory increase in retirement age, to face the prospects of
swift population ageing. The book assesses the impact of different
retirement rules on individual decisions, on the sustainability of
social security systems and on labour market dynamics, and inquires
whether mandatory retirement has not become an outdated feature of
modern pension systems. The motivations behind public intervention
in fixing compulsory retirement rules as well as the likely
consequences of allowing the individual a higher responsibility in
retirement choices are analysed. These issues are examined both
theoretically and empirically and through a focus on
country-specific patterns of retirement and on policy issues
relevant at the European level. The impact of later retirement on
the labour market is also investigated, considering the role of
retirement rules in increasing employment. This comprehensive and
topical book will appeal to academics and scholars of public
finance as well as pensions experts and organisations.
This book focuses on pension policies in Europe and interestingly
includes comparisons both within the EU and between EU countries
and the US. The authors show how different countries are confronted
with similar problems and that comparison of national experiences
may be of great help for the 'open method of coordination' now
adopted in the EU. The papers deal mainly with the effects of the
huge payroll taxes differentials between countries on individual
retirement choices and the labour market, with taxation of
contributions and pensions, and with the portability of
occupational pensions. The main impact on labour supply is shown to
be early retirement due to actuarially unfair pension formulae. The
authors also argue that the US experience shows that taxation of
contributions and savings for old-age may not generate the hoped
for incentive effects, while an example of inconsistent taxation of
pensions is offered by Germany. Finally, it is shown that limited
portability of defined benefits plans does not appear to be a
strong impediment to labour mobility in Europe. Pension Policy in
an Integrating Europe will be valued by scholars of both public
policy, public finance and European studies, and those
practitioners and policymakers involved in insurance in the EU.
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