Life-Expectancy Risk and Pensions [E-Book]: Who Bears the Burden? / Edward Whitehouse
Two-thirds of pension reforms in OECD countries in the last 15 years contain measures that will automatically link future pensions to changes in life expectancy. This quiet revolution in pension policy means that the financial costs of longer lives will be shared between generations subject to a rul...
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Full text |
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Personal Name(s): | Whitehouse, Edward. |
Imprint: |
Paris :
OECD Publishing,
2007
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Physical Description: |
47 p. ; 21 x 29.7cm. |
Note: |
englisch |
DOI: |
10.1787/060025254440 |
Series Title: |
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OECD Social, Employment and Migration Working Papers ;
60 |
Keywords: |
Social Issues/Migration/Health |
Two-thirds of pension reforms in OECD countries in the last 15 years contain measures that will automatically link future pensions to changes in life expectancy. This quiet revolution in pension policy means that the financial costs of longer lives will be shared between generations subject to a rule, rather than spreading the burden through potentially divisive political battles as happened in the past. As a result, nearly half of OECD countries - 13 out of 30 - now have an automatic link between pensions and life expectancy in their retirement-income systems, compared with only one country (Denmark) a decade ago. Indeed, the spread of this policy has a strong claim as the major innovation in pension policy in recent years. The link to life expectancy has been achieved in four different ways... |