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In recent years, in both the specialist press and the tabloids, the idea of privatization of social security has become a shimmering catch phrase
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In recent years, in both the specialist press and the tabloids, the idea of privatization of social security has become a shimmering catch phrase
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 332
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Februar 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 612g
- ISBN-13: 9781138519886
- ISBN-10: 113851988X
- Artikelnr.: 57039447
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 332
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Februar 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 612g
- ISBN-13: 9781138519886
- ISBN-10: 113851988X
- Artikelnr.: 57039447
Xenia Scheil-Adlung
1: Privatization: Visions, Effects, and Challenges; 1: Social Security
Privatization: Different Context-Different Discourse; 2: Privatization:
More Individual Choice in Social Protection; 3: Africa: Implications of
Privatization Measures Initiated by International Financing Organizations;
2: Privatization: An Organizing Principle for Financing Social Security; 4:
The Case for Funded, Individual Accounts in Pension Reform; 5: Individual
Accounts Versus Social Insurance: A United States Perspective; 6:
Strengthening Public Pensions with Private Investment-Canada's Approach to
Privatization Pressures; 3: Privatization: A Tool for Governance?; 7:
Germany: Efficiency and Affordability in Social Security through Partial
Privatization of Provision for Risks; 8: Privatization: From Panacea to
Poison Pill-The Dutch Paradigm; 9: Healthy Markets-Sick Patients? Effects
of Recent Trends on the Health Care Market; 10: Social Health Insurance
Development in Low-Income Developing Countries: New Roles for Government
and Nonprofit Health Insurance Organizations in Africa and Asia; 4: The
Empirical Framework: National Experiences of Privatization in Various
Branches of Social Security; 11: The Privatization of Pensions in Latin
America and Its Impacts on the Insured, the Economy and Old-Age People; 12:
First Experiences with the Privatization of the Polish Pension Scheme: A
Status Report; 13: Austria's Discussion on Social Security Privatization:
Some Notes Focusing on Old-Age Insurance; 14: The Evolution of Public and
Private Insurance in Sweden during the 1990s; 15: Tunisian Health
Insurance: Towards Complementarity of Public and Private Sector; 16: Impact
of Private Sector Involvement in Health Insurance in Uruguay: A Status
Report; 17: China: From Public Health Insurance to a Multi-Tiered
Structure; 18: Impacts of Private Sector Involvement in Health Insurance in
Indonesia; 19: Trends in Private Sector Involvement in the Delivery of
Workforce Development Services in the United States; 20: Changes in
Employment Services through Deregulation; 21: The Privatization of Accident
Compensation in New Zealand; 22: The Advantages of Statutory over Private
Employment Accident Insurance: The Example of Germany; 23: The Danish
Experience with Privatization: New ways of Solving Tasks
Privatization: Different Context-Different Discourse; 2: Privatization:
More Individual Choice in Social Protection; 3: Africa: Implications of
Privatization Measures Initiated by International Financing Organizations;
2: Privatization: An Organizing Principle for Financing Social Security; 4:
The Case for Funded, Individual Accounts in Pension Reform; 5: Individual
Accounts Versus Social Insurance: A United States Perspective; 6:
Strengthening Public Pensions with Private Investment-Canada's Approach to
Privatization Pressures; 3: Privatization: A Tool for Governance?; 7:
Germany: Efficiency and Affordability in Social Security through Partial
Privatization of Provision for Risks; 8: Privatization: From Panacea to
Poison Pill-The Dutch Paradigm; 9: Healthy Markets-Sick Patients? Effects
of Recent Trends on the Health Care Market; 10: Social Health Insurance
Development in Low-Income Developing Countries: New Roles for Government
and Nonprofit Health Insurance Organizations in Africa and Asia; 4: The
Empirical Framework: National Experiences of Privatization in Various
Branches of Social Security; 11: The Privatization of Pensions in Latin
America and Its Impacts on the Insured, the Economy and Old-Age People; 12:
First Experiences with the Privatization of the Polish Pension Scheme: A
Status Report; 13: Austria's Discussion on Social Security Privatization:
Some Notes Focusing on Old-Age Insurance; 14: The Evolution of Public and
Private Insurance in Sweden during the 1990s; 15: Tunisian Health
Insurance: Towards Complementarity of Public and Private Sector; 16: Impact
of Private Sector Involvement in Health Insurance in Uruguay: A Status
Report; 17: China: From Public Health Insurance to a Multi-Tiered
Structure; 18: Impacts of Private Sector Involvement in Health Insurance in
Indonesia; 19: Trends in Private Sector Involvement in the Delivery of
Workforce Development Services in the United States; 20: Changes in
Employment Services through Deregulation; 21: The Privatization of Accident
Compensation in New Zealand; 22: The Advantages of Statutory over Private
Employment Accident Insurance: The Example of Germany; 23: The Danish
Experience with Privatization: New ways of Solving Tasks
1: Privatization: Visions, Effects, and Challenges; 1: Social Security
Privatization: Different Context-Different Discourse; 2: Privatization:
More Individual Choice in Social Protection; 3: Africa: Implications of
Privatization Measures Initiated by International Financing Organizations;
2: Privatization: An Organizing Principle for Financing Social Security; 4:
The Case for Funded, Individual Accounts in Pension Reform; 5: Individual
Accounts Versus Social Insurance: A United States Perspective; 6:
Strengthening Public Pensions with Private Investment-Canada's Approach to
Privatization Pressures; 3: Privatization: A Tool for Governance?; 7:
Germany: Efficiency and Affordability in Social Security through Partial
Privatization of Provision for Risks; 8: Privatization: From Panacea to
Poison Pill-The Dutch Paradigm; 9: Healthy Markets-Sick Patients? Effects
of Recent Trends on the Health Care Market; 10: Social Health Insurance
Development in Low-Income Developing Countries: New Roles for Government
and Nonprofit Health Insurance Organizations in Africa and Asia; 4: The
Empirical Framework: National Experiences of Privatization in Various
Branches of Social Security; 11: The Privatization of Pensions in Latin
America and Its Impacts on the Insured, the Economy and Old-Age People; 12:
First Experiences with the Privatization of the Polish Pension Scheme: A
Status Report; 13: Austria's Discussion on Social Security Privatization:
Some Notes Focusing on Old-Age Insurance; 14: The Evolution of Public and
Private Insurance in Sweden during the 1990s; 15: Tunisian Health
Insurance: Towards Complementarity of Public and Private Sector; 16: Impact
of Private Sector Involvement in Health Insurance in Uruguay: A Status
Report; 17: China: From Public Health Insurance to a Multi-Tiered
Structure; 18: Impacts of Private Sector Involvement in Health Insurance in
Indonesia; 19: Trends in Private Sector Involvement in the Delivery of
Workforce Development Services in the United States; 20: Changes in
Employment Services through Deregulation; 21: The Privatization of Accident
Compensation in New Zealand; 22: The Advantages of Statutory over Private
Employment Accident Insurance: The Example of Germany; 23: The Danish
Experience with Privatization: New ways of Solving Tasks
Privatization: Different Context-Different Discourse; 2: Privatization:
More Individual Choice in Social Protection; 3: Africa: Implications of
Privatization Measures Initiated by International Financing Organizations;
2: Privatization: An Organizing Principle for Financing Social Security; 4:
The Case for Funded, Individual Accounts in Pension Reform; 5: Individual
Accounts Versus Social Insurance: A United States Perspective; 6:
Strengthening Public Pensions with Private Investment-Canada's Approach to
Privatization Pressures; 3: Privatization: A Tool for Governance?; 7:
Germany: Efficiency and Affordability in Social Security through Partial
Privatization of Provision for Risks; 8: Privatization: From Panacea to
Poison Pill-The Dutch Paradigm; 9: Healthy Markets-Sick Patients? Effects
of Recent Trends on the Health Care Market; 10: Social Health Insurance
Development in Low-Income Developing Countries: New Roles for Government
and Nonprofit Health Insurance Organizations in Africa and Asia; 4: The
Empirical Framework: National Experiences of Privatization in Various
Branches of Social Security; 11: The Privatization of Pensions in Latin
America and Its Impacts on the Insured, the Economy and Old-Age People; 12:
First Experiences with the Privatization of the Polish Pension Scheme: A
Status Report; 13: Austria's Discussion on Social Security Privatization:
Some Notes Focusing on Old-Age Insurance; 14: The Evolution of Public and
Private Insurance in Sweden during the 1990s; 15: Tunisian Health
Insurance: Towards Complementarity of Public and Private Sector; 16: Impact
of Private Sector Involvement in Health Insurance in Uruguay: A Status
Report; 17: China: From Public Health Insurance to a Multi-Tiered
Structure; 18: Impacts of Private Sector Involvement in Health Insurance in
Indonesia; 19: Trends in Private Sector Involvement in the Delivery of
Workforce Development Services in the United States; 20: Changes in
Employment Services through Deregulation; 21: The Privatization of Accident
Compensation in New Zealand; 22: The Advantages of Statutory over Private
Employment Accident Insurance: The Example of Germany; 23: The Danish
Experience with Privatization: New ways of Solving Tasks