Buch, Englisch, 320 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 634 g
Reihe: Pensions Research Council
Lessons from the Global Financial Crisis
Buch, Englisch, 320 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 634 g
Reihe: Pensions Research Council
ISBN: 978-0-19-966069-8
Verlag: OUP UK
The worldwide financial crisis has wrought deep changes in capital and labor markets, old-age retirement systems, and household retirement and consumption patterns. Confidence has been shaken in both the traditional defined benefit and defined contribution plans.
Around the world, plan sponsors, fiduciaries, policymakers, and households have gained a new awareness of retirement risk. When pressed to reform post-crisis, many would recommend enhancing financial advice for plan participants, emphasizing flexibility and the positive effect of working another one or two years to make up for investment losses in the downturn. Adding to this is the continuing need for financial education, essential as the retirement system moves increasingly toward personal
account pensions. Perhaps most important of all is the need for greater understanding of risk throughout the retirement security system, along with new approaches to re-engineering retirement pensions.
This volume explores the lessons to be learnt for retirement planning and long-term financial security in view of the massive shocks to stock markets, labour markets, and pension plans resulting from the financial crisis. It aims to rethink retirement in the new economic era, including the resilience of defined contribution plans and how defined benefit plans reacted to the financial crisis.
Zielgruppe
Academics, researchers, and graduate students in Pensions, Financial Management, Human Resources, Economics, Public Finance, Public Policy, Accounting, and Corporate Governance; pension regulators and policymakers; pension and benefits analysts, consultants, financial advisers, and plan sponsors; human resource/industrial relations specialists
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
1: Raimond Maurer, Olivia S. Mitchell, and Mark Warshawsky: Retirement Security and the Financial Economic Crisis: An Overview
Part I. Rethinking Retirement in the New Economic Era
2: Julia Coronado and Karen Dynan: Changing Retirement Behavior in the Wake of the Financial Crisis
3: Barbara A. Butrica, Richard W. Johnson, and Karen E. Smith: Potential Impacts of the Great Recession on Future Retirement Incomes
4: Michael Hurd and Susann Rohwedder: Effects of the Economic Crisis on the Older Population: How Expectations, Consumption, Bequests, and Retirement by the Older Population Responded to Market Shocks
5: Jason J. Fichtner, John W.R. Phillips, and Barbara A. Smith: Retirement Behavior and the Global Financial Crisis
Part II. Rethinking the Resilience of Defined Contribution Plans
6: Ning Tang, Olivia S. Mitchell, and Stephen P. Utkus: Trading in 401(k) Plans During the Financial Crisis
7: Jingjing Chai, Raimond Maurer, Olivia S. Mitchell, and Ralph Rogalla: Lifecycle Impacts of the Financial Crisis on Optimal Consumption-Portfolio Choices and Labor Supply
8: David Wray: A Stress Test for the Private Employer Defined Contribution System
Part III. How Defined Benefit Plans Handled the Financial Crisis
9: Mark Warshawsky: Corporate Defined Benefit Pension Plans and the Financial Crisis: Impact and Sponsor and Government Reactions
10: Judith F. Mazo and Eli Greenblum: Multiemployer Pension Plans in the Financial Crisis
11: Robert L. Clark, Alan Glickstein, and Tomeka Hill: Adopting Hybrid Pension Plans: Effects of Economic Crisis and Regulatory Reform
12: Lans Bovenberg and Theo Nijman: Collective Pensions and the Global Financial Crisis: The Case of the Netherlands
13: Andrew G. Bigg: How Have Public Sector Pensions Responded to the Financial Crisis?




