Recent events in several countries have underscored the importance of good governance in private occupational pension plans. The present Paper uses contract theory to analyse the interplay of residual claims and control rights in private pensions. The residual claimant is the plan sponsor in a defined benefit (DB) plan and the pool of beneficiaries in a defined contribution (DC) plan. The main control rights we examine relate to decisions on funding, asset allocation, and asset management. Under complete contracting, governance can be shown to be neutral: DC and DB plans differ only on risk allocation. If instead contracts are incomplete, a DB (DC) plan should: (1) Assign more vigilance responsibility to the sponsor (beneficiaries); (2) Rel...
The riskiness of state employee pension plan portfolios – as measured by the ratio of equities to fi...
Investment regulations and defined contribution pensions This paper assesses the impact of different...
Employers offer pension plans for two main reasons; paternalism and skills market competiveness. Rec...
Recent events in several countries have underscored the impor-tance of good governance in private oc...
Recent events in several countries have underscored the importance of good governance in private occ...
The design and governance of pension funds is an important topic of academic research and public pol...
International audienceThis contribution aims at enriching the debate on the priority of unfunded pen...
This contribution aims at enriching the debate on the priority of unfunded pension rights in the cas...
In classical pension design, there are essentially two kinds of pension schemes: Defined Benefit (DB...
New accounting rules and increased scarcity of risk capital have led to growing pressure on corporat...
In many countries, pension funds based on individual accounts have been affected by high operating c...
This paper considers a world in which pension funds may default, the cost of the associated risk of ...
Responsible for the welfare of beneficiaries, pension funds have many tasks and functions. Consequen...
This paper studies the governance of defined-benefit pension plans in the United Kingdom. We constru...
Considerable attention has been devoted to the funding of defined-benefit pension plans. Both the le...
The riskiness of state employee pension plan portfolios – as measured by the ratio of equities to fi...
Investment regulations and defined contribution pensions This paper assesses the impact of different...
Employers offer pension plans for two main reasons; paternalism and skills market competiveness. Rec...
Recent events in several countries have underscored the impor-tance of good governance in private oc...
Recent events in several countries have underscored the importance of good governance in private occ...
The design and governance of pension funds is an important topic of academic research and public pol...
International audienceThis contribution aims at enriching the debate on the priority of unfunded pen...
This contribution aims at enriching the debate on the priority of unfunded pension rights in the cas...
In classical pension design, there are essentially two kinds of pension schemes: Defined Benefit (DB...
New accounting rules and increased scarcity of risk capital have led to growing pressure on corporat...
In many countries, pension funds based on individual accounts have been affected by high operating c...
This paper considers a world in which pension funds may default, the cost of the associated risk of ...
Responsible for the welfare of beneficiaries, pension funds have many tasks and functions. Consequen...
This paper studies the governance of defined-benefit pension plans in the United Kingdom. We constru...
Considerable attention has been devoted to the funding of defined-benefit pension plans. Both the le...
The riskiness of state employee pension plan portfolios – as measured by the ratio of equities to fi...
Investment regulations and defined contribution pensions This paper assesses the impact of different...
Employers offer pension plans for two main reasons; paternalism and skills market competiveness. Rec...