Actuaries and sponsors of public sector defined benefit pension plans agree that each generation of taxpayers should bear its fair share of the long term plan cost. Actuarial methods and assumptions are designed to equate expected costs across generations. This paper uses arbitrage principles to show that equating expected costs unfairly lowers risk-adjusted costs for early generations and raises them for later generations. The use of expected rather than risk-adjusted returns on risky assets leads to sub-optimal asset allocations, granting of valuable options (skim funds), and costly financing strategies such as Pension Obligation Bonds
Years of high inflation, good investment returns and profits during the 1970s and 1980s created the ...
and Mike Page (Portsmouth) for their helpful comments on an earlier draft. Although the author is a ...
This paper investigates whether public pension plans’ risk-taking behavior has changed after the rec...
Actuaries and sponsors of public sector defined benefit pension plans agree that each generation of ...
Actuaries commonly, and in accordance with professional standards, use expected rates of return (on ...
This dissertation consists of a preface and three chapters each examining how pension actuarial prin...
This paper investigates the determinants of public pension plan risk-taking behavior using the perce...
The asset allocation is a crucial decision for pension funds, and this paper analyses the economic f...
I show that risk-sharing pension plans can reduce some of the shortcomings of defined benefit and de...
Mandatory programs for old-age benefits tend to require periodic adjustments due to demographic and ...
State and local U.S. pension plans hold an estimated $3 trillion in assets, with market values regul...
In this paper we model the transfers of value between the various generations in a funded pension sc...
In a company with defined benefit plans, pension assets often represent a sizable portfolio of finan...
In this paper we model the transfers of value between the various generations in a funded pension sc...
This article proposes a model for a defined benefit pension plan to minimize total funding variation...
Years of high inflation, good investment returns and profits during the 1970s and 1980s created the ...
and Mike Page (Portsmouth) for their helpful comments on an earlier draft. Although the author is a ...
This paper investigates whether public pension plans’ risk-taking behavior has changed after the rec...
Actuaries and sponsors of public sector defined benefit pension plans agree that each generation of ...
Actuaries commonly, and in accordance with professional standards, use expected rates of return (on ...
This dissertation consists of a preface and three chapters each examining how pension actuarial prin...
This paper investigates the determinants of public pension plan risk-taking behavior using the perce...
The asset allocation is a crucial decision for pension funds, and this paper analyses the economic f...
I show that risk-sharing pension plans can reduce some of the shortcomings of defined benefit and de...
Mandatory programs for old-age benefits tend to require periodic adjustments due to demographic and ...
State and local U.S. pension plans hold an estimated $3 trillion in assets, with market values regul...
In this paper we model the transfers of value between the various generations in a funded pension sc...
In a company with defined benefit plans, pension assets often represent a sizable portfolio of finan...
In this paper we model the transfers of value between the various generations in a funded pension sc...
This article proposes a model for a defined benefit pension plan to minimize total funding variation...
Years of high inflation, good investment returns and profits during the 1970s and 1980s created the ...
and Mike Page (Portsmouth) for their helpful comments on an earlier draft. Although the author is a ...
This paper investigates whether public pension plans’ risk-taking behavior has changed after the rec...