This paper is motivated by the idea to create, wherever possible, rational mechanisms that adapt pension systems automatically to a changed economic and demographic environment, rather than to leave such adaptations to discretionary high-profile pension reforms which all too often stir political opposition. The paper delineates the theory behind such rational mechanisms, shows the advantages and limits of „self-stabilizing“ pension systems, and compares the Swedish and the German approaches to rule-bound pension policy.
Policymakers pushing pension reforms have tended to justify changes on the basis that they would ma...
Pension reform has emerged as a major political issue in most advanced welfare states. Sluggish econ...
The paper examines formation and sustainability of Pay-As-You-Go pension systems within the conseque...
This paper is motivated by the idea to create, wherever possible, rational mechanisms that adapt pen...
This paper is motivated by the idea to create, wherever possible, rational mechanisms that adapt pen...
Summary Aim of this keynote is to develop a framework how to approach the design of pension policies...
The German pension system was the first formal pension system in the world, designed by Bismarck nea...
This chapter takes Switzerland’s much praised three-pillar system to illustrate some of the challeng...
Chancellor Bismarck introduced public pensions in Germany more than 120 years ago. That system has e...
Pension reform has emerged as a major political issue in most advanced welfare states. Sluggish econ...
The paper aims to compare the preferences of the unlimited rational economic agent for consumption a...
Reforms of the public pension systems are on top of the European policy agenda. Current costs are hi...
This paper describes the German pension reform process 1992-2007 with a stress on a remark-able deve...
France, Germany and Italy, to take the three largest economies in continental Europe, have large and...
The last two decades have been characterised by significant changes in national pension arrangements...
Policymakers pushing pension reforms have tended to justify changes on the basis that they would ma...
Pension reform has emerged as a major political issue in most advanced welfare states. Sluggish econ...
The paper examines formation and sustainability of Pay-As-You-Go pension systems within the conseque...
This paper is motivated by the idea to create, wherever possible, rational mechanisms that adapt pen...
This paper is motivated by the idea to create, wherever possible, rational mechanisms that adapt pen...
Summary Aim of this keynote is to develop a framework how to approach the design of pension policies...
The German pension system was the first formal pension system in the world, designed by Bismarck nea...
This chapter takes Switzerland’s much praised three-pillar system to illustrate some of the challeng...
Chancellor Bismarck introduced public pensions in Germany more than 120 years ago. That system has e...
Pension reform has emerged as a major political issue in most advanced welfare states. Sluggish econ...
The paper aims to compare the preferences of the unlimited rational economic agent for consumption a...
Reforms of the public pension systems are on top of the European policy agenda. Current costs are hi...
This paper describes the German pension reform process 1992-2007 with a stress on a remark-able deve...
France, Germany and Italy, to take the three largest economies in continental Europe, have large and...
The last two decades have been characterised by significant changes in national pension arrangements...
Policymakers pushing pension reforms have tended to justify changes on the basis that they would ma...
Pension reform has emerged as a major political issue in most advanced welfare states. Sluggish econ...
The paper examines formation and sustainability of Pay-As-You-Go pension systems within the conseque...