Real-World Shocks and Retirement System Resiliency

Real-World Shocks and Retirement System Resiliency

Author: Olivia S. Mitchell

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2024-01-07

Total Pages: 334

ISBN-13: 0198894155

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This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read at Oxford Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations. Growing awareness of real-world shocks including market downturns, health surprises, and labor market readjustment is calling into question the ability of global retirement systems to remain healthy and sustain future retirees. Financial and labor market stresses are shaping how older workers fare as they head into retirement, and how younger workers must prepare financially for their futures. These shocks come on top of long-standing concerns surrounding rising longevity, along with the adequacy and sustainability of public and private benefit systems. This volume explores how these challenges will drive the need for new policy drawing on perspectives of senior and new researchers to the field, as well as exciting new datasets.


Employment Time and the Cyclicality of Earnings Growth

Employment Time and the Cyclicality of Earnings Growth

Author: Eran B. Hoffmann

Publisher: International Monetary Fund

Published: 2018-05-16

Total Pages: 67

ISBN-13: 1484356659

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We study how the distribution of earnings growth evolves over the business cycle in Italy. We distinguish between two sources of annual earnings growth: changes in employment time (number of weeks of employment within a year) and changes in weekly earnings. Changes in employment time generate the tails of the earnings growth distribution, and account for the increased dispersion and negative skewness in the distribution of earnings growth in recessions. In contrast, the cross-sectional distribution of weekly earnings growth is symmetric and stable over the cycle. Thus, models that rely on cyclical idiosyncratic risk, should separately account for the employment margin in their earnings process to avoid erroneous conclusions. We propose such a process, based on the combination of simple employment and wage processes with few parameters, and show that it captures the procyclical skewness in changes in earnings growth and other important features of its distribution.


Ageism

Ageism

Author: Tay K. McNamara

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2019-05-24

Total Pages: 214

ISBN-13: 1315472597

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Ageism: Past, Present, and Future presents perspectives for understanding ageism and puts ageism in the context of specific social institutions. McNamara and Williamson uniquely provide a number of complementary ways to understand ageism, including social and psychological theories of ageism, economic development, ageism as frame or lens, and ageism at the intersection of various social categories such as gender and race. They then put ageism in the context of mass media, h ealth care, employment, and public policy. This short text is an ideal addition to courses on sociology of aging, social policy, and social problems.


The New Politics of Old Age Policy

The New Politics of Old Age Policy

Author: Robert B. Hudson

Publisher: JHU Press

Published: 2014-09-22

Total Pages: 292

ISBN-13: 1421414872

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Scholars, students, and policymakers will appreciate the volume's timely overview of the evolution of aging policy.


Handbook of the Economics of Population Aging

Handbook of the Economics of Population Aging

Author: John Piggott

Publisher: Elsevier

Published: 2016-12-01

Total Pages: 602

ISBN-13: 0444538410

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Handbook of the Economics of Population Aging, Volume 1B provides the economic literature on aging and associated subjects, presenting comprehensive portraits of both social and theoretical issues. As the second of two volumes in this series on the economics of population aging, it continues the discussion, delving deeper into topics such as the labor market and human resource issues, gerontology, history, and the sociological and political ramifications of this fascinating topic whose inception dates back to the late 1970's. This volume includes literature that has appeared in general economics journals, in various field journals in economics, especially, but not exclusively, those covering labor market and human resource issues, information from interdisciplinary social science and life science journals, and data presented in papers by economists published in journals associated with gerontology, history, sociology, political science, and demography, amongst others. - Presents comprehensive portraits of social and theoretical issues that can be used by both policymakers and scholars - Readers receive diverse perspectives on subjects that can be closely associated with national and regional concerns - Chapters offer comprehensive, critical reviews and expositions on the essential aspects of the economics of population aging


Tax Policy and the Economy

Tax Policy and the Economy

Author: Robert A. Moffitt

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Published: 2017-08-22

Total Pages: 272

ISBN-13: 022653927X

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The papers in Tax Policy and the Economy Volume 31 are all directly related to important and often long-standing issues, often including how transfer programs affect tax rates and behavior. In the first paper, Alan Auerbach, Laurence Kotlikoff, Darryl Koehler, and Manni Yu take a lifetime perspective on the marginal tax rates facing older individuals and families arising from a comprehensive set of sources. In the second, Gizem Kosar and Robert A. Moffitt provide new estimates of the cumulative marginal tax rates facing low-income families over the period 1997-2007. In the third paper, Emmanuel Saez presents evidence on the elasticity of taxable income with respect to tax rates, drawing on data from the 2013 federal income tax reform. In the fourth, Conor Clarke and Wojciech Kopczuk survey the treatment of business income taxation in the United States since the 1950s, providing new data on how business income and its taxation have evolved over time. In the fifth paper, Louis Kaplow argues that the reduction in statutory tax rates from base-broadening may not reduce effective marginal tax rates on households.