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This thought-provoking book investigates the political and economic
transformation that has taken place over the past three decades in
Central, Eastern and Southeastern Europe (CESEE) since the fall of
the Iron Curtain. Through an examination of both the successes and
shortcomings of post communist reform and the challenges ahead for
the region, it explores the topical issues of economic transition
and integration, highlighting important lessons to be learned.
Featuring contributions from both top academics and experienced
policymakers, 30 Years of Transition in Europe first discusses the
process of transition in CESEE from a historical perspective,
analysing the impacts of differing approaches on economic and
monetary policy, the role of central banks and the speed of reform
in various countries of the region. Chapters also compare CESEE
transformations to emerging economies in Asia, and examine
contemporary concerns around financial and monetary stability, as
well as exploring the long-term determinants of economic growth
such as digitalization, climate change and demographic trends.
Economists, central bankers, and policymakers in the banking sector
and other international financial organizations will find this book
an enlightening read. It will also be useful for academics in
economics and politics with a particular interest in emerging
European economies and European integration.
COVID-19 and other recent crises have proved the need to review the
state-of-play and implement robust institutional frameworks in the
complex, heterogenous and decentralised European supervisory
architecture. This insightful book outlines what can be done to
innovate the current set-up in the face of pressing issues such as
climate change, BigTech and crypto assets. Revisiting the debate on
financial sector oversight in Europe, a range of highly acclaimed
international academics and influential policymakers discuss the
scope of institutional arrangements. Chapters examine how the
architecture of European financial supervision currently works,
analysing the trends in banking supervision design and the
influence that recent financial and economic crises have exerted.
Providing a rare insight into the role that central banks play in
the supervisory set-up, their accountability and democratic
legitimacy, the book also considers the ways that macro- and
micro-prudential and monetary policies interact. Gleaning lessons
from the FinTech revolution and the COVID-19 crisis, the book
ultimately concludes by seeking a path for optimal architecture for
European financial supervision. With invaluable industry insights,
this cutting-edge book will prove vital to academics in the field
of financial economics and financial regulation, alongside
policymakers looking to transform their current supervisory
architecture.
The first phase of transition to a market economy in Central and
Eastern Europe was characterized by a sharp decline in output. The
fall in real GDP exceeded 20% while real industrial production even
decreased by 40%. This text provides comprehensive multi-factor
explanations for this unique and painful experience. Various
hypotheses are analyzed: credit and fiscal policies may have been
too tight; the collapse of the CMEA and the USSR came as a shock;
domestic producers were neither experienced, nor flexible enough to
adjust the output to new patterns of demand. It contains a
combination of authors from East and West who have extensively
analyzed new data based on national studies. If we can understand
the causes of recent output decline then we can hope to assess the
prospects for Eastern Europe. The book is intended for researchers
and students as well as interested officials who deal with the
transition of formerly centrally planned economies in Central and
Eastern Europe.
The successful macroeconomic stabilization in Central and Eastern
European countries has encouraged inflows of foreign capital badly
needed to promote economic development. Strikingly, these countries
have found capital inflows in their various forms to be a mixed
blessing, threatening the macroeconomic balance that they have
recently achieved. These countries have learned that it is not easy
to continue to attract foreign capital and simultaneously to reduce
its adverse effects on inflation, the exchange rate and the current
account, and to contain disturbances resulting from reversals of
the flows. This book investigates recent experiences in Central and
Eastern Europe and contrasts it with that of Latin America and East
Asia, and suggests appropriate policies and lessons to be learned.
The authors conclude that many features of, and policy dilemmas
faced by, formerly centrally planned economies in Europe are
similar to those in other emerging economies. However, certain
unique characteristics such as data limitations and the fragility
of the banking and financial systems, compound the problems faced
by policy makers in Central and Eastern Europe. This book will
prove invaluable to policymakers and scholars interested in and
responsible for international finance in transition economies.
Das Lehrbuch ermoeglicht einen schnellen Einstieg in
(wirtschafts-)ethische Grundlagentheorien sowie in die moralische
Verhaltensoekonomik, die angesichts weitreichender
Unternehmensskandale zunehmend in den Fokus akademischer Lehrplane
ruckt. In pragnanter, verstandlicher Weise werden die wesentlichen
(wirtschafts-)ethischen sowie moralpsychologischen Theorien
erlautert. Kurze Lerneinheiten, ubersichtliche didaktische Module
sowie die begleitende Lernkontrolle sorgen fur eine nachhaltige
Wissensvermittlung. Es richtet sich damit an alle, die sich mit
Fragen der Wirtschaftsethik im Rahmen ihrer Aus- und Weiterbildung
(auch im Nebenfach) sowie ihrer beruflichen Praxis
auseinandersetzen.
Gegenstand dieses Buchs ist die Frage, wie die Budgetpolitik
gestaltet werden soll, um eine nachhaltige Entwicklung der
Staatsverschuldung zu gewahrleisten. Die Beitrage berucksichtigen
dabei sowohl kurz- und mittelfristige konjunkturelle Auswirkungen
von Staatsschulden wie Wachstumseffekte. Einen Schwerpunkt bilden
die Probleme in der Eurozone, die durch die Staatsschuldenkrise im
Gefolge der Grossen Rezession besonders betroffen war. Neben
Untersuchungen zu den institutionellen Besonderheiten des Euroraums
zeigen die in diesem Buch enthaltenen Landerstudien, wie man testen
kann, ob Entwicklungspfade der Staatsverschuldung nachhaltig sind,
und welchen Herausforderungen sich die nationalen budgetpolitischen
Entscheidungstrager bei der Sicherung der Nachhaltigkeit
gegenuberstehen.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird ein neuer Ansatz fur die Analyse
von Lebenseinkommen, und darauf aufbauend ein neues
wohlfahrtsfundiertes Masskonzept fur Lebenseinkommensverteilungen
entwickelt, welches ein geeigneteres Instrumentarium fur
Verteilungs- und Umvertei ungsanaly- sen darstellen sollte als die
traditionellen Konzepte. Obwohl der Be- handlung von
Lebenseinkommen in theoretischen und empirischen Studien zunehmend
Aufmerksamkeit geschenkt wird, bleiben in diesen eine Reihe von
Fragen und Problemen offen. Auf einige dieser Fragen und Probleme
glaubt der Autor Antwort geben zu koennen. Im Zuge der Entstehung
der Arbeit konnte der Autor von einer Reihe wertvoller Diskussionen
und Anregungen profitieren. Besonders gedankt sei hierbei Dieter
Boes (Universitat Bonn), Gerhart Bruckmann, Bernd Genser und
Gerhard Orosel (alle Universitat Wien), Erich Streissler
(University of StanfordjUniversitat Wien), Winfried Schmahl (FU
Ber- lin), Alexander Van der Bellen (Universitat Wien) und Robert
von Weizsacker (Universitat Bonn). Einzelne Teile der Arbeit
konnten im finanzwissenschaftlichen Privatissimum der Universitat
Wien, am Oster- treffen des "Heiligenkreuzer Arbeitskreises" und im
Forschungsseminar des Department of Economics (University of
Bristol) vorgetragen wer- den. Den Teilnehmern dieser
Veranstaltungen sei fur ihre konstruktive Kritik gedankt. Ein
mehrwoechiger Forschungsaufenthalt an der Univer- sity of Bristol
und die zahlreichen Diskussionen mit Angus Deaton und Martin
Browning haben letztlich viel zur Abklarung des Ansatzes beige-
tragen. Die mit der quantitativen Abschatzung des Ansatzes
verbundenen umfang- reichen EDV-Arbeiten erforderten einen hohen
Zeit- und Kernspeicherbe- darf. Fur das von den Verantwortlichen
des Rechenzentrums der Univer- sitat Wien gezeigte grosszugige
Entgegenkommen sei ihnen an dieser Stelle gedankt.
Nonfinancial Defined Contribution (NDC) schemes are now in their
teens. The new pension concept was born in the early 1990s,
implemented from the mid-1990s in Italy, Latvia, Poland and Sweden,
legislated most recently in Norway and Egypt and serves as
inspiration for other reform countries. This innovative unfunded
individual account scheme created high hopes at a time when the
world seemed to have been locked into a stalemate between piecemeal
reforms of ailing traditional defined benefit schemes and
introducing pre-funded financial account schemes. The experiences
and conceptual issues of NDC in its childhood were reviewed in a
prior anthology (Holzmann and Palmer, 2006). This new anthology
published in 2 volumes serves to review its adolescence and with
the aim of contributing to a successful adulthood. Volume 1 on
Lessons, Issues, Implementation includes a detailed analysis of the
experience and the key policy lessons in the old and new pilot
countries and general thoughts around the implementation of NDCs in
other countries, including Chile, Greece and China. Volume 2 on
Gender, Politics, Financial Stability includes deeper and new
analyses of these issues that found limited or no attention in the
2006 publication. The key policy conclusions include: (i) NDC
schemes work well (as documented by the experience of Italy,
Latvia, Poland and Sweden during the crisis) but there is room to
make them work even better; (ii) Go for an immediate transition to
the new scheme to avoid future problems; (iii) Identify the legacy
costs and their explicit financing during the transition as they
will hit you otherwise soon; (iv) Adopt an explicit stabilizing
mechanism to guarantee solvency; (v) Establish a reserve fund to
guarantee liquidity; (vi) Elaborate an explicit mechanism to share
the systemic longevity risk; and, last but not least; (vii) Address
the gender implications of NDC with deeper analysis and open
political discourse.
"Severance pay, a program that provides compensation to workers on
termination of employment, is the most widely used income
protection program for the unemployed-yet it is often blamed for
creating economic inefficiencies such as reducing employment and
limiting access to jobs for disadvantaged groups. Reforming
Severance Pay: An International Perspective fills the knowledge gap
in evaluating the international experience by providing a
collection of worldwide overviews and labor market impact
assessments, theoretical analyses, and country case studies. The
authors summarize the performance of existing severance pay
arrangements around the world and discuss recent innovative
severance pay reforms in Austria, Chile, and the Republic of Korea.
Reforming Severance Pay proposes policy directions based on country
characteristics such as folding severance pay of higher income
coun--tries into existing social insurance programs and making
severance pay a contractual affair between market partners to live
up to the efficiency-enhancing device in a knowledge-based economy.
For lower income countries, the authors advise reforming severance
pay toward realistic benefit levels, strengthening compliance of
benefit payments by the employer, and safeguarding minimum
benefits. This report will be of interest to policy makers and
researchers working on labor market, unemployment benefit, and
pension issues; economic policy reform; poverty reduction; and
social analysis and policy."
Comprehensive reform of China s pension and social security system
is an essential element of achieving its objectives of a harmonious
society and sustainable development. Over the past few years, the
Government has considered various options and initiated several
significant measures. In 2009 the authorities established a
national framework for rural pensions, the Rural Pension Pilot
Program (RPPP) and in 2011 a Pilot Social Pension Insurance for
Urban Residents announced. In this process, it has articulated
principles for a reformed urban pension system (indicated by 12
Chinese characters ) which are broad coverage, protects at the
basic level, is multi-layered, and sustainable while the principles
for the rural system (indicated by 12 characters ) are broad
coverage, protects at the basic level, flexible, and sustainable.
These principles underpin the commitments made at the 17th Party
Congress towards a comprehensive and integrated social security
system by 2020. Although substantial reforms of the pension system
have been undertaken over the past two decades, some policymakers
have suggested that additional reforms are needed to meet the needs
of China s rapidly changing economy and society. Issues such as
legacy costs, system fragmentation and limited coverage have not
been fully addressed. At the same time, many new challenges have
emerged such as rapid urbanization, increased income inequality and
urban-rural disparities, greater informalization of the labor
force, changes in family structure, and the effects of increased
globalization. This report has been prepared at the request of the
Ministry of Finance to develop a medium term vision of a holistic
framework that could be realized by 2040 for strengthening old age
income protection in China which is consistent with the principles
outlined in the 12 characters and design options towards achieving
it. The main body of this report outlines this vision summarizing
the key features of a proposed medium-term pension system while the
annexes provide the deeper analysis and context which underpins the
recommendations contained herein."
Nonfinancial Defined Contribution (NDC) schemes are now in their
teens. The new pension concept was born in the early 1990s,
implemented from the mid-1990s in Italy, Latvia, Poland and Sweden,
legislated most recently in Norway and Egypt and serves as
inspiration for other reform countries. This innovative unfunded
individual account scheme created high hopes at a time when the
world seemed to have been locked into a stalemate between piecemeal
reforms of ailing traditional defined benefit schemes and
introducing pre-funded financial account schemes. The experiences
and conceptual issues of NDC in its childhood were reviewed in a
prior anthology (Holzmann and Palmer, 2006). This new anthology
serves to review its adolescence and with the aim of contributing
to a successful adulthood. To this end the book offers a deep and
comprehensive review of the experience of countries where NDC
schemes have been in place for a decade or more, takes stock of the
discussions of the place of NDCs in the world of pension reform,
and addresses in detail important issues related to implementation
and design, such as the of the "NDC story", making transparent the
legacy costs, financial accounting, balancing, creation of a
reserve fund, gender, and longevity. The book also contains
analyses of the pros and cons of NDC contra FDC and a typical paygo
DB scheme in two Latin American countries. The key policy
conclusions include: (i) NDC schemes work well (as documented by
the experience of Italy, Latvia, Poland and Sweden during the
crisis) but there is room to make them work even better; (ii) Go
for an immediate transition to the new scheme to avoid future
problems; (iii) Identify the legacy costs and their explicit
financing during the transition as they will hit you otherwise
soon; (iv) Adopt an explicit stabilising mechanism to guarantee
solvency; (v) Establish a reserve fund to guarantee liquidity; (vi)
Elaborate an explicit mechanism to share the systemic longevity
risk; and, last but not least; (vii) Address the gender
implications of NDC with deeper analysis and open political
discourse.
The use of matching contributions to enhance the participation and
level of savings in pensions system has now been in use for nearly
three decades in a number of high income countries. Increasingly,
countries across the full range of economic development are looking
to the design as a means of addressing the low rates of
participation in formal pension and other retirement savings
systems. A number of countries have recently introduced innovations
in their pension systems that significantly rely on contributions
matches and related types of direct subsidies to provide incentives
for groups that mandates and other indirect methods such as
preferential tax treatment have been unsuccessful in reaching.
There is particular interest among developing countries in
utilizing this design to extend coverage to informal sector and low
income workers that typically do not pay income related taxes. This
volume provides descriptions and analysis of the design, experience
and outcomes achieved in the high income countries where there
information about the dynamics and outcomes that this approach has
achieved is not beginning to emerge. It also reviews new efforts to
use the design in a number of other settings in which the matching
contributions have been included as a significant element in reform
of the pension system. The review of the experience with matching
contribution across this full range of settings provides important
observations and some initial lessons for policy makers and
analysts who may be considering or evaluating the use of this
approach to increase pension coverage.
All countries in the former transition economies of Central,
Eastern, and Southern Europe have undertaken public pension reforms
of varying depth and orientation, often with the support of the
World Bank. Although the reformed public pension schemes provide
broad benefit adequacy, in most cases additional measures are
needed to achieve fiscal sustainability in an aging society.
'Adequacy of Retirement Income after Pension Reforms in Central,
Eastern, and Southern Europe: Eight Country Studies' assesses the
benefit adequacy of the reformed pension systems for eight
countries Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Croatia, Hungary, Poland,
Romania, the Slovak Republic, and Slovenia to identify policy gaps
and options. The authors identify the motivations for reform
against the backdrop of the trend toward multi-pillar arrangements,
document key provisions, and compare them in the context of the
World Bank's five-pillar paradigm for pension reform. They then
evaluate the sustainability and adequacy of reformed pension
systems and provide recommendations to address gaps and take
advantage of opportunities for further reforms. The case studies
and summary suggest the following broad policy conclusions: Fiscal
sustainability has improved in most study countries, but few are
fully prepared for the inevitability of population aging. The
linkage between contributions and benefits has been strengthened,
and pension system designs are better suited to market conditions
Levels of income replacement are generally adequate for all but
some categories of workers (including those with intermittent
formal sector employment or low lifetime wages), and addressing
their needs requires initiatives that go beyond pension policy.
Further reforms should focus on extending labor force participation
by the elderly to avoid benefit cuts that could undermine adequacy
and very high contribution rates that could discourage formal
sector employment. More decisive financial market reforms are
needed for funded provisions to deliver on the expectations of
participants and keep funded pensions safe. This book will be of
interest to policy makers, researchers, and everyone interested in
the topic of pensions in the region, and beyond."
In high-income countries, the percent of the population covered
under mandatory old-age pension programs is typically high but
often incomplete; in low- and middle-income countries, coverage is
low and even stagnant. At the same time, older people are less able
to rely on family and community support as a result of growing
urbanization and migration. And low-income workers and the poor
simply cannot save enough to prepare for their old age. As a
response, many countries are considering or have already
implemented various forms of retirement income transfers aiming to
guarantee a minimum level of income during old age. Despite the
growing popularity of these programs, research assessing their
success has been limited. 'Closing the Coverage Gap: The Role of
Social Pensions and Other Retirement Income Transfers' brings
together a group of renowned academics, policy analysts, and policy
makers working in the area of pensions and public policy. They
discuss how social pensions and other retirement income transfers
can be used to close the coverage gap of mandatory pension systems:
how they operate, when they can be appropriate, and how to make
them work. The book reviews the experiences of low-, middle-, and
high-income countries with the design and implementation of
retirement income transfers. The book analyzes design issues
related to financing, incentives, targeting mechanisms, and
administration, and also identifies the role of promising
instruments such as matching contributions to reach parts of the
informal sector.
Population aging is placing enormous pressures on the pension
benefits governments are able to provide. The former transition
economies of the countries of Central, Eastern, and Southern Europe
(CESE) face unique challenges. The growth of their aging
populations outpaces other European countries, while the growth of
their financial markets (essential to fund pension provisions) lags
behind. With support and direction from the ERSTE Foundation, an
Austrian group focused on Central European policy issues, a World
Bank team investigated the challenges faced by these countries
against the background of international experience from the OECD
countries and Latin America. ""Aging Population, Pension Funds, and
Financial Markets: Regional Perspectives and Global Challenges for
Central, Eastern, and Southern Europe"" examines how well the
financial systems in the CESE economies were prepared for the
challenges of multipillar pension reform, how ready they are for
the approaching payout of benefits to the first participants,
whether returns from pension funds can be sustained in an aging
population, and how determined policy actions might be implemented
to complete financial market development.
Policymakers worldwide are struggling to adapt their pension
systems to the reality of aging populations, globalization, and
tightening budgets. The World Bank actively supports these
policymakers by helping them to identify the economic and
demographic challenges facing them to highlighting potential policy
responses and providing implementation support. 'New Ideas about
Old Age Security' is a selection of papers presented at a
conference in September 1999 convened by the World Bank and
attended by leading academics and policymakers from around the
world. These papers, which have subsequently been revised, contain
a sample of the most recent thinking in the global debate over
pension reform. The papers in this volume explore a wide variety of
pension reform issues. Some of the topics covered in this book
include new approaches to multi-pillar pension reform, the
relevance of index funds for pension investment in equities, and
managing public pension reserves.
Theoretical and policy perspectives on the taxation of pension,
viewed in an international context. Policy makers and academic
researchers have been preoccupied in recent decades with the design
of pension schemes and effective pension system reform. Relatively
little attention has been given to the taxation of pensions and,
more broadly, the provision of retirement income. In this book,
experts from a range of countries explore the interconnection.
Their contributions are especially timely, given recent demographic
and political developments including population aging that
lengthens the time between contribution payment and benefit
receipt, the mobility of capital and labor brought about by
globalization, and the complexity of pension taxation within and
between countries. In shedding light on these issues, the chapters
document the various forms of taxation of pension systems; use
economic theory to explain both qualitative and quantitative
observations; and consider whether the observed interaction of
taxation and pensions is efficient. Theoretical overviews are
followed by rigorous analyses of pension taxation in specific
countries, including Denmark, Sweden, Portugal, Australia, Germany,
the United Kingdom, and the United States. Contributors Torben M.
Andersen, Spencer Bastani, Hazel Bateman, Soeren Blomquist, Axel
Boersch-Supan, Jorge Miguel Bravo, Gary Burtless, Rafal Chomik,
Helmuth Cremer, Carl Emmerson, Csaba Feher, Bernd Genser, Robert
Holzmann, Paul Johnson, Alain Jousten, Christian Keuschnigg, Eric
Koepcke, George Kudrna, Jukka Lassila, Luca Micheletto, Pierre
Pestieau, John Piggott, Christopher Quinn, Tarmo Valkonen, Alan
Woodland
Offering public pensions with an account scheme that pays out what
one paidin plus interest, and that keeps the system financially
sound while not using financial markets has emerged as a reform
benchmark for all pension schemes worldwide. The publication
analyses country experiences, design and operational challenges,
and solutions.
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