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The economic demands of an ageing population, coupled with the
crisis of public spending pose one of the greatest challenges to
social policy in both the East and West. This book focuses on the
political economy of pensions, particularly on the interaction
between private and state provision. Enterprise and the Welfare
State argues that there is more to welfare than simply provision by
the state and so the focus of this book is on the welfare society
rather than the welfare state. This requires a new system of
statistical accounting and a different focus for case studies. A
multidisciplinary approach is used to examine the design of the
pensions system in nine countries with different institutional
welfare mixes. Using a common conceptual framework, it compares and
contrasts the goals and realities of the welfare systems in France,
Germany, The Netherlands and Sweden, where strong occupational
pensions are in operation, with the more modest welfare states in
Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States. Each country case
study provides a grounded analysis of the evolution of pension
design and traces the impact of the policies on the economic
well-being of the aged and the performance of the economy. It
offers new data on the level of spending of enterprise based
occupational pensions and examines the implications for
redistribution resulting from changes in the design of state and
occupational pensions. This book will be essential reading for
academics, students and public policymakers interested in the
economics of welfare, social policy and the future of pension
provision.
The economic demands of an ageing population, coupled with the
crisis of public spending pose one of the greatest challenges to
social policy in both the East and West. This book focuses on the
political economy of pensions, particularly on the interaction
between private and state provision. Enterprise and the Welfare
State argues that there is more to welfare than simply provision by
the state and so the focus of this book is on the welfare society
rather than the welfare state. This requires a new system of
statistical accounting and a different focus for case studies. A
multidisciplinary approach is used to examine the design of the
pensions system in nine countries with different institutional
welfare mixes. Using a common conceptual framework, it compares and
contrasts the goals and realities of the welfare systems in France,
Germany, The Netherlands and Sweden, where strong occupational
pensions are in operation, with the more modest welfare states in
Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States. Each country case
study provides a grounded analysis of the evolution of pension
design and traces the impact of the policies on the economic
well-being of the aged and the performance of the economy. It
offers new data on the level of spending of enterprise based
occupational pensions and examines the implications for
redistribution resulting from changes in the design of state and
occupational pensions. This book will be essential reading for
academics, students and public policymakers interested in the
economics of welfare, social policy and the future of pension
provision.
This study paper examines the economic consequences of immigration
for public finances in Denmark. Using new figures for the period
2004-2008, net transfers are calculated and presented as an
extension to the figures that already existed for the period
1991-2001. The net transfers are calculated from a marginal
perspective, which means that the included public expenditures and
incomes can be traced to each individual person in the sample. The
study is therefore suited for analyzing the economic consequences
if more/less people immigrate. A consistent pattern to emerge
throughout the study is that net transfers from Western first- and
second-generation immigrants to state funds are positive, while
those from non-Western first- and second-generation immigrants are
negative. The new calculations show that net transfers from
non-Western first- and second-generation immigrants fell from DKK
(Danish Kroner) -12.8 billion in 2004 to DKK -9.1 billion in 2008,
largely due to the improved employment situation in Denmark.
However, the results also show that the composition chosen of the
group of non-Western immigrants has a significant effect on the
calculation of net transfers, in that these transfers are reduced
to DKK -2.2 billion if refugees are excluded from this group.
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