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The market for retirement financial advice has never been more
important and yet more in flux. The long-term shift away from
traditional defined benefit pensions toward defined contribution
personal accounts requires all of us to be more sophisticated today
than ever before. However, the landscape for financial advice is
changing all over the world, with new rules and regulations
transforming the financial advice profession. This volume explores
the market for retirement financial advice, to explain what
financial advisors do and how to measure performance and impact.
Who are these professionals and what standards must they abide by?
How do they make money and what are their incentives? How can one
protect clients from bad advice, and what is good advice? Does
advice alone effect changes in personal habits? Answering these
questions, along with new technology that will decrease the
delivery costs of advice, will play a transformative role in
helping more households receive the quality financial advice that
they need. Accordingly, this volume illuminates the market and
regulatory challenges so as to enhance consumer, plan sponsor, and
regulator decisions.
The book offers new ways to think about retirement security in a volatile financial environment. Myriad retirement risks confront employees, retirees, employers, and governments. This book illustrates how stakeholders can reinvent pensions that perform well in a competitive global setting.
The debates about the what, who, and how of tax policy are at the
core of politics, policy, and economics. The Economics of Tax
Policy provides a straightforward overview of recent research in
the economics of taxation. Tax policies generate considerable
debate among the public, policymakers, and scholars. These disputes
have grown more heated in the United States as the incomes of the
wealthiest 1 percent and the rest of the population continue to
diverge. This important volume enhances understanding of the
implications of taxation on behavior and social outcomes by having
leading scholars evaluate key topics in tax policy. These include
how changes to the individual income tax affect long-term economic
growth; the challenges of tax administration, compliance, and
enforcement; and environmental taxation and its effects on tax
revenue, pollution emissions, economic efficiency, and income
distribution. Also explored are tax expenditures, which are subsidy
programs in the form of tax deductions, exclusions, credits, or
favorable rates; how college attendance is influenced by tax
credits and deductions for tuition and fees, tax-advantaged college
savings plans, and student loan interest deductions; and how tax
policy toward low-income families takes a number of forms with
different distributional effects. Among the most contentious issues
explored are influences of capital gains and estate taxation on the
long term concentration of wealth; the interaction of tax policy
and retirement savings and how policy can "nudge" improved planning
for retirement; and how the reform of corporate and business
taxation is central to current tax policy debates in the United
States. By providing overviews of recent advances in thinking about
how taxes relate to behavior and social goals, The Economics of Tax
Policy helps inform the debate.
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