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The worldwide financial crisis has wrought deep changes in capital
and labor markets, old-age retirement systems, and household
retirement and consumption patterns. Confidence has been shaken in
both the traditional defined benefit and defined contribution
plans. Around the world, plan sponsors, fiduciaries, policymakers,
and households have gained a new awareness of retirement risk. When
pressed to reform post-crisis, many would recommend enhancing
financial advice for plan participants, emphasizing flexibility and
the positive effect of working another one or two years to make up
for investment losses in the downturn. Adding to this is the
continuing need for financial education, essential as the
retirement system moves increasingly toward personal account
pensions. Perhaps most important of all is the need for greater
understanding of risk throughout the retirement security system,
along with new approaches to re-engineering retirement pensions.
This volume explores the lessons to be learnt for retirement
planning and long-term financial security in view of the massive
shocks to stock markets, labour markets, and pension plans
resulting from the financial crisis. It aims to rethink retirement
in the new economic era, including the resilience of defined
contribution plans and how defined benefit plans reacted to the
financial crisis.
For more than five decades, Fundamentals of Private Pensions has
been the most authoritative text and reference book on retirement
plans in the United States. The ninth edition is completely updated
and reflects recent developments in retirement plans including the
passage of the US Pension Protection Act of 2006 (PPA), the
widespread shift toward hybrid and defined contribution plans, and
a burgeoning economics and finance research literature on
retirement and retirement plans. The volume is organized into eight
main sections so the reader may use the volume as a text, a
research tool, or a general reference.
Section I (Chapter 1) introduces the historical evolution of the
pension movement and the underlying forces that shaped its
progress. Section II (Chapters 2 and 3) explains how
employer-provided pensions fit into the patchwork of the U.S.
retirement income security system, especially Social Security. The
section also includes a discussion of the economics of tax
incentives and their effect on retirement plan offerings and the
structure of the benefits provided. Section III (Chapters 4 through
9) lays out the economic role of retirement plans--their design,
workforce incentives, plan finances, production of adequate
retirement income, possibilities for phased retirement, and the
risk of outliving pension assets. Section IV (Chapters 10 through
13) examines the various forms of defined benefit and defined
contribution plans, including hybrid plans, in terms of their
structure, requirements, and operations. Section V (Chapters 14
through 20) lays out the regulatory environment in which plans
operate; this extensive material has been especially updated to
reflect PPA, and the reams of associated guidance and implementing
regulations. Section VI (Chapters 21 through 25) explores the
funding and accounting rules under which private defined benefit
plans operate; this section also reflects the new PPA rules. The
penultimate section (Chapters 26 through 28) includes a complete
revamping of chapters on risk management and investments applicable
to retirement plans. The section describes modern portfolio theory
and its broad implications for retirement investing, and in two
separate chapters, specific implications for defined benefit and
defined contribution plans. The final section (Chapter 29)
concludes the text with a discussion of the future of retirement
plans in the United States and around the world--a particularly
timely subject in light of the extreme financial volatility
experienced in 2008 and the pending retirement of the baby boom
generation.
Annuity insurance products help protect retirees against outliving
their incomes. Dramatic advances in life expectancy mean that
today's retirees must plan on living into their eighties, their
nineties, and even beyond. Longer life expectancies are the symbol
of a prosperous society, but this progress also means that some
retirees will need to plan conservatively and cut back
substantially on their living standards or risk living so long that
they exhaust their resources. This book examines the role that life
annuities can play in helping people protect themselves against
such outcomes. A life annuity is an insurance product that pays out
a periodic amount for as long as the annuitant is alive, in
exchange for a premium. The book begins with a history of life
annuity markets during the twentieth century in the United States
and elsewhere. It then explores recent trends in annuity pricing
and money's worth, as well as the economic value generated for
purchasers of these products. The book explains the potential
importance of inflation-protected annuities and stock-market-linked
variable annuities in providing more complete retirement security.
The concluding chapters examine life annuities in various
institutional settings and the tax treatment of annuity products.
The Evolving Pension System examines the foundations and the future
of the private pension system. It provides a broad overview of the
underlying assumptions, characteristics, and effects of existing
pension policy, as well as alternative views on how public policy
toward pensions should evolve in the future. Contributors include
Robert Clark (North Carolina State University), Eric Engen (Federal
Reserve Board), William G. Gale (Brookings Institution), Theodore
Groom (Groom Law Group, Chartered), Daniel Halperin (Harvard),
Alicia Munnell (Boston College), Leslie Papke (Michigan State
University), Joseph Quinn (Boston College), Sylvester Schieber
(Watson Wyatt), John B. Shoven (Stanford), and Jack Vanderhei
(Temple University and EBRI). William G. Gale is the Joseph A.
Pechman Fellow in the Economic Studies program at the Brookings
Institution. John B. Shoven is Charles R. Schwab Professor at
Stanford University. Mark J. Warshawsky is director of research at
the TIAA-CREF Institute.
"The private pension system, together with Social Security, has
provided millions of Americans with income security in retirement.
But over the past thirty years, pension coverage has stagnated,
leaving behind some vulnerable groups. Defined contribution plans
have exposed workers to greater investment risk, while cash balance
and other hybrid plans may have adverse effects on older workers
caught in the transition. Pension regulations, infamous for their
complexity, can be bewildering to policy analysts and policymakers.
Private Pensions and Public Policies sheds timely and much-needed
light on specific issues within the broader context and framework
of pension reform. Contributors focus on topics that must be
addressed in any reform effort, including the effects of the shift
in emphasis toward defined contribution plans (after the 1974
Employee Retirement Income and Security Act) and hybrid plans (from
the 1990s); regulatory issues such as nondiscrimination rules and
contribution limits; how to increase the information available to
participants and improve financial education; how participants in
defined contribution plans make choices on questions such as asset
allocation, back-loaded versus front-loaded saving, and annuities
versus lump sum distributions; and the interaction of the private
pension system with Social Security. Contributors include Robert L.
Clark (North Carolina State University), Sylvester J. Schieber
(Watson Wyatt Worldwide), Richard A. Ippolito (George Mason
University School of Law), Alan L. Gustman (Dartmouth College),
Thomas L. Steinmeier (Texas Tech University), John Karl Scholz
(University of Wisconsin), Dean M. Maki, (JPMorgan Chase), William
Even (Miami University of Ohio), Jagadeesh Gokhale (American
Enterprise Institute), Laurence J. Kotlikoff (Boston University),
Mark J. Warshawsky (TIAA-CREF Institute), Annika Sunden (Boston
College), Andrew A. Samwick (Dartmouth College), David A. Wise
(Harvard University), Joel Dickson (The Vanguard Group), Peter
Merrill (PriceWaterhouseCoopers), Kent Smetters (Wharton School),
Yuewu Xu (TIAA-CREF Institute), Janemarie Mulvey (Watson Wyatt
Worldwide), Peter Orszag (Sebago Associates, Inc.), James M.
Poterba (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), John B. Shoven
(Stanford University), Clemens Sialm (University of Michigan),
Leslie E. Papke (Michigan State University), Jeffrey R. Brown
(Harvard University), and Michael Hurd (RAND Corporation). "
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