Robert L. Clark and Olivia S. Mitchell, Editors
This newest book in the Pension Research Council series explores how rising pension and healthcare costs, along with workforce aging, are affecting pension and retirement planning around the world. Many middle-aged workers now realize that they will have to work longer than intended, as they begin to recognize that their retirement resources will be inadequate to finance retirement consumption. Volatile capital markets, rising medical-care costs, and low saving rates make retirement behavior and policy a moving target.
August 2005 · Oxford University Press · ISBN 0-19-928460-1
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- Table of Contents and Chapter 1: The Changing Retirement Paradigm
Robert L. Clark and Olivia S. Mitchell - Chapter 2: Looking Backward, Looking Forward: Where is Pension Policy Headed?
James A. Klein - Chapter 3: Reality Testing for Pension Reform
Pamela Perun and C. Eugene Steuerle - Chapter 4: Older Workers: Employment and Retirement Trends
Patrick Purcell - Chapter 5: Work and Retirement Plans Among Older Americans
Katharine G. Abraham and Susan N. Houseman - Chapter 6: The Future of Pension Plan Design
David McCarthy - Chapter 7: Strategies to Retain Older Workers
Janemarie Mulvey and Steven Nyce - Chapter 8: Developments in Phased Retirement
Robert Hutchens and Kerry L. Papps - Chapter 9: Educating Pension Plan Participants
William J. Arnone - Chapter 10: Changes in Accounting Practices Will Drive Pension Paradigm Shifts
Douglas Fore - Chapter 11: Why Pension Fund Management Needs a Paradigm Shift
Keith Ambachtsheer - Chapter 12: Profitable Prudence: The Case for Public Employer Defined Benefit Plans
Gary W. Anderson and Keith Brainard - Chapter 13: The Future of Pensions in Canada
Silvana Pozzebon - Chapter 14: The Future of Retirement in Sweden
Annika Sundén - Chapter 15: Risk Management and Pension Plan Choice in Japan
Masaharu Usuki