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This authoritative collection brings together 100 key articles on
the subject of the welfare state selected by one of the world's
leading experts. The first volume discusses the economic theory and
related matters which underpin analysis of the welfare state.
Volume II is about income transfers, especially social security
benefits and poverty relief. Volume III looks at benefits in kind,
particularly health care and education. This important work
provides an analytical background to the subject whilst
illustrating the vast array of literature available. It will be
invaluable to students and professionals alike.
Higher education matters. No longer the exclusive province of a
small intellectual elite, it is a key element in national economic
performance. A modern economy needs a high-quality university
system, and needs to make it accessible to everyone who can
benefit. But mass higher education is expensive, and competes for
public funds with pensions and health care, to say nothing of
nursery education and schools. How to pay for higher education has
thus become a central issue.
This book tells the story of the UK debate, illustrating a head-on
collision between the economic imperatives of student loans and
regulated market forces and the political imperative of "free"
higher education. It also tells the story of the partnership of an
economist and a political professional. The first part of the book
contains selected writing from the late 1980s about two key
elements in the puzzle: the proper design of student loans (writing
which was picked up and promptly implemented in other countries),
and the roleof regulated market forces, an area which remains a
political minefield in most countries. The book traces those twin
elements through the 1990s and into the 2000s, culminating in
important - and perhaps path-breaking - legislation in 2004. Both
sets of policies are rooted in the economics of information, and
thus have technical roots not ideological ones. The only
ideological element (a major preoccupation of both authors) is to
widen access to higher education.
The book offers lessons both about policy design and about the
politics of reform of particular relevance to countries which have
not yet addressed the issue, including many OECD countries, the
more advanced post-communistreforming countries and, increasingly
to middle-income developing countries. More generally, the policies
are suitable for any country which has the administrative capacity
to collect income tax.
Higher education matters. No longer the exclusive province of a
small intellectual elite, it is a key element in national economic
performance. A modern economy needs a high-quality university
system, and needs to make it accessible to everyone who can
benefit. But mass higher education is expensive, and competes for
public funds with pensions and health care, to say nothing of
nursery education and schools. How to pay for higher education has
thus become a central issue.
This book tells the story of the UK debate, illustrating a head-on
collision between the economic imperatives of student loans and
regulated market forces and the political imperative of "free"
higher education. It also tells the story of the partnership of an
economist and a political professional. The first part of the book
contains selected writing from the late 1980s about two key
elements in the puzzle: the proper design of student loans (writing
which was picked up and promptly implemented in other countries),
and the roleof regulated market forces, an area which remains a
political minefield in most countries. The book traces those twin
elements through the 1990s and into the 2000s, culminating in
important - and perhaps path-breaking - legislation in 2004. Both
sets of policies are rooted in the economics of information, and
thus have technical roots not ideological ones. The only
ideological element (a major preoccupation of both authors) is to
widen access to higher education.
The book offers lessons both about policy design and about the
politics of reform of particular relevance to countries which have
not yet addressed the issue, including many OECD countries, the
more advanced post-communistreforming countries and, increasingly
to middle-income developing countries. More generally, the policies
are suitable for any country which has the administrative capacity
to collect income tax.
Mandatory pensions are a worldwide phenomenon. However, with fixed
contribution rates, monthly benefits, and retirement ages, pension
systems are not consistent with three long-run trends: declining
mortality, declining fertility, and earlier retirement. Many
systems need reform. This book gives an extensive nontechnical
explanation of the economics of pension design. The theoretical
arguments have three elements:
* Pension systems have multiple objectives--consumption smoothing,
insurance, poverty relief, and redistribution. Good policy needs to
bear them all in mind.
* Good analysis should be framed in a second-best context-- simple
economic models are a bad guide to policy design in a world with
imperfect information and decision-making, incomplete markets and
taxation.
* Any choice of pension system has risk-sharing and distributional
consequences, which the book recognizes explicitly.
Barr and Diamond's analysis includes labor markets, capital
markets, risk sharing, and gender and family, with comparison of
PAYG and funded systems, recognizing that the suitable level of
funding differs by country.
Alongside the economic principles of good design, policy must also
take account of a country's capacity to implement the system. Thus
the theoretical analysis is complemented by discussion of
implementation, and of experiences, both good and bad, in many
countries, with particular attention to Chile and China.
Most higher education finance literature assumes that students
cannot pledge their future earnings to finance their education in a
free society. Investing in Human Capital, first published in 2004,
challenges that assumption and explores human capital contracts as
an alternative mechanism for financing higher education. Investing
in Human Capital tracks the roots of the idea behind human capital
contracts, discusses the beneficial consequences they would have on
students and on higher education markets, and describes how they
can develop in light of the innovations that have taken place in
financial markets during the last decades. The book also explores
the challenges - ethical and financial - that such instruments face
and offers implementation alternatives that can bring about their
existence in the context of a national higher education financing
programme.
This book is about economics and its application to the welfare state. Its core argument is that the welfare state exists for reasons additional to poverty relief, reasons arising out of pervasive problems of imperfect information, risk, and uncertainty. Barr focuses on the efficiency argument, indicating that the welfare state is here to stay, and discusses the ways in which it can and will adapt to economic and social change.
This study recommends employing "human capital contracts" wherein students agree to pay a percentage of their income over time in exchange for funds to finance their education. The main difference between "human capital contracts" and loans is the variable value of the payments students make during the repayment period. Their financial consequences, of risk transfer from students to investors and increased information regarding future graduates' earnings, make the contracts an attractive alternative in funding higher education.
The sixth edition of this successful textbook discusses elements of
the welfare system, including cash benefits, the health service and
education. The text argues that the welfare state does not exist
just to help the underprivileged, but also offers efficiencies in
areas where the private markets would be inefficient or would not
exist at all. Suitable for both economics students and students on
related disciplines, this book places the content within a
theoretical framework, and uses learning features to engage
students with the discussion. Each chapter is concluded with a
summary of the key points and an appendix, which provides a
non-technical summary for students with no previous exposure to
economics. Worked examples from around the world facilitate the
comparison of global welfare issues, while diagrams allow readers
to visualize concepts. The author ends each chapter with 'questions
for further discussion' which could be prepared to structure
seminars or to independently test understanding, while an annotated
list of further reading suggestions guides additional research.
This book is accompanied by the following online resources. For
students: - Web links - Further reading For lecturers: - PowerPoint
slides
This is an abridgement of Barr and Diamond's 'Reforming Pensions:
Principles and Policy Choices' (OUP, 2008), a larger book that is
intended for policy makers and as a supplement in college courses.
The problem. Mandatory pension systems are a worldwide phenomenon.
However, with given contribution rates, monthly benefits and
retirement ages, pension systems are not consistent with three
long-run trends - declining mortality, declining fertility, and
earlier retirement. Thus many systems need reform. Principles. This
book gives an extensive but nontechnical explanation of the
economics of pension design. The theoretical arguments have three
elements. 1. Pension systems have multiple objectives - consumption
smoothing, insurance, poverty relief, and redistribution. Good
policy needs to bear them all in mind. 2. Good analysis should be
framed in a second-best context - simple economic models are a bad
guide to policy design in a world with imperfect information and
decision-making, incomplete markets and taxation. 3. Any choice of
pension system has distributional consequences, which the book
recognizes explicitly. The analysis includes discussion of labor
markets, capital markets, risk sharing and gender and family, with
comparison of PAYG and funded systems, recognizing that the
suitable level of funding differs by country. Alongside the
economic principles of good design, policy must also take account
of a country's capacity to implement the system. Thus the
theoretical analysis is complemented by discussion of
implementation, and of experiences, both good and bad, in many
countries, with particular attention to China and Chile. Policy
conclusions: 1. Sound application of the principles outlined above
can and does lead to widely different systems in different country
settings. 2. Unless there are transfers from outside the system,
any improvement to the finances of a pension system must involve
one or more of (a) higher contribution rates, (b) lower monthly
pensions, (c) later retirement at the same monthly pension, (d)
policies designed to increase national output. 3.The previous
statement holds whatever the degree of funding. If a public pension
is regarded as unsustainable the problem needs to be addressed
directly by one of these methods.
The fifth edition of this successful textbook discusses the
different parts of the welfare system and, in particular, cash
benefits, the health service and education. The text argues that
the welfare state does not exist just to help the underprivileged,
but also for means of efficiency, in areas where the private
markets would be inefficient or would not exist at all.
Suitable for both economics students and students on related
disciplines, this book is accessible and contains a non-technical
appendix in every chapter, diagrams, additional readings, worked
examples and end of chapter discussions.
Online Resource Centre
For students:
- Web links
- Further reading
- Links to related Oxford Scholarship Online titles
For lecturers:
- PowerPoint slides - these have been expanded for the fifth
edition
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