
Future pension provision is highly controversial; it juxtaposes the challenges of old age security with the exigencies of global finance. Clearly, demography, finance and public accountability are crucial to current political debate. But there are other important issues. The problems of paying for the retirement of the baby boom generation has exposed profound differences in the advanced economies in terms of their financial institutions and infrastructure. Pension security has been re-conceptualised, in part, as an issue of global finance and international comparative advantage bringing with it a re-definition of risk and pension security. This book examines how major continental European and Anglo-American countries are dealing with these pressures, to what extent these responses are beginning to redraw the boundaries between public and private responsibility for pension security, and what the implications of public-private partnerships are for the financial organisation and infrastructure of European and global financial markets, and the nation-based welfare state. The contributors, all involved in policy development in their respective countries, assess the comparative strengths and weaknesses of recent pension initiatives in the light of continuing fiscal constraints and current market instabilities. Using a tight comparative framework, the book questions assumed divisions between states and markets, as new divisions between public and private spheres of pension responsibility require new regulatory machinery to guarantee future security. This book provides a vital reference point in understanding pension security in the 21st century for academics and postgraduates in the social sciences, economics and finance, geography, politics and social policy, policy makers in OECD countries and industry professionals.
This book investigates how advanced economies are reconfiguring the boundaries between public and private responsibility for pension security in the face of demographic shifts and global financial instability. Gordon L. Clark and Noel Whiteside, alongside a cohort of international policy experts, analyze the structural differences in financial infrastructure across continental European and Anglo-American nations. The authors argue that the traditional welfare state is undergoing a fundamental transformation, necessitating new regulatory frameworks to manage the shifting definitions of risk and accountability in retirement provision.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this work as a rigorous academic resource for understanding the intersection of geography, economics, and social policy. Readers frequently note the dense, analytical nature of the prose, which is tailored specifically for postgraduates, policy makers, and industry professionals.
Page Count:
308
Publication Date:
2004-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191532150
ISBN-13:
9780191532153
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