The authors examine competing theories in both industrialized and developing country settings to consider how demographic change, the development of financial institutions, public policy and other economic forces influence the amount, form and timing of intergenerational transfers. This book is a collection of papers by leading scholars whose research concerns economic transfers between generations. The issues addressed have great relevance to demographic issues, particularly the determination of fertility, to economic issues, including equity and growth, and to public policy, especially social security reform.…mehr
The authors examine competing theories in both industrialized and developing country settings to consider how demographic change, the development of financial institutions, public policy and other economic forces influence the amount, form and timing of intergenerational transfers.This book is a collection of papers by leading scholars whose research concerns economic transfers between generations. The issues addressed have great relevance to demographic issues, particularly the determination of fertility, to economic issues, including equity and growth, and to public policy, especially social security reform.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Andrew Mason is Professor of Economics at the University of Hawaii at Manoa and Senior Fellow and former Director of the Program on Population at the East-West Center. He has served on advisory committees and as a consultant to the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, the US National Academy of Sciences, the US Agency for International Development, and the United Nations. Georges Tapinos is Professor of Economics at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques, Paris, and a former General Secretary of IUSSP.
Inhaltsangabe
* 1: Andrew Mason and George Tapinos: Introduction * Part I: Intergenerational Accounting * 2: Ronald D. Lee: Intergenerational Transfers and the Economic Life Cycle: A Cross-cultural Perspective * 3: Andrew Mason and Tim Miller: Dynasties, Intergenerational Transfers, and Life-cycle Income: A Case Study of Taiwan * 4: Jagadeesh Gokhale: Demographic Change, Generational Accounts, and National Saving in the United States * Part II: Government-funded Pension Programmes * 5: Jorge Bravo: On the Rate of Return of Unfunded Pension Systems * 6: Rafael P. Rofman: Moving Social Security towards Fully Funded Schemes: Who Pays the Cost? * 7: Salvador Valdés-Prieto: The Political Economy of Two Chilean Pension Systems * 8: Didier Blanchet and Jean-Alain Montford: Pensions and Generational Histories in a Simple Demo-economic Model: The Case of France * 9: Shripad Tuljapurkar and Ronald D. Lee: Demographic Uncertainty and the OASDI Trust Funds of the United States * Part III: The Family and Intergenerational Transfers * 10: Andrew D. Foster and Mark R. Rosenzweig: Financial Intermediation, Transfers, and Commitment: Do Banks Crowd Out Private Insurance Arrangements in Low-Income Rural Areas * 11: Alessandro Cigno: Self-enforcing Family Constitutions: Implications for Saving, Fertility, and Social Security * 12: Sumon Kumar Bhaumik and Jeffrey B. Nugent: Wealth Accumulation, Fertility, and Transfers to Elderly Household Heads in Peru * 13: Yean-Ju Lee: Support between Rural Parents and Migrant Children in a Rapidly Industrializing Society: South Korea * 14: Joseph G. Altonji, Fumio Hayashi, and Laurence Kotlikoff: The Effects of Income and Wealth on Time and Money Transfers between Parents and Children * 15: Anne Laferrère: Housing Inheritance: An Empirical Analysis of French Data
* 1: Andrew Mason and George Tapinos: Introduction * Part I: Intergenerational Accounting * 2: Ronald D. Lee: Intergenerational Transfers and the Economic Life Cycle: A Cross-cultural Perspective * 3: Andrew Mason and Tim Miller: Dynasties, Intergenerational Transfers, and Life-cycle Income: A Case Study of Taiwan * 4: Jagadeesh Gokhale: Demographic Change, Generational Accounts, and National Saving in the United States * Part II: Government-funded Pension Programmes * 5: Jorge Bravo: On the Rate of Return of Unfunded Pension Systems * 6: Rafael P. Rofman: Moving Social Security towards Fully Funded Schemes: Who Pays the Cost? * 7: Salvador Valdés-Prieto: The Political Economy of Two Chilean Pension Systems * 8: Didier Blanchet and Jean-Alain Montford: Pensions and Generational Histories in a Simple Demo-economic Model: The Case of France * 9: Shripad Tuljapurkar and Ronald D. Lee: Demographic Uncertainty and the OASDI Trust Funds of the United States * Part III: The Family and Intergenerational Transfers * 10: Andrew D. Foster and Mark R. Rosenzweig: Financial Intermediation, Transfers, and Commitment: Do Banks Crowd Out Private Insurance Arrangements in Low-Income Rural Areas * 11: Alessandro Cigno: Self-enforcing Family Constitutions: Implications for Saving, Fertility, and Social Security * 12: Sumon Kumar Bhaumik and Jeffrey B. Nugent: Wealth Accumulation, Fertility, and Transfers to Elderly Household Heads in Peru * 13: Yean-Ju Lee: Support between Rural Parents and Migrant Children in a Rapidly Industrializing Society: South Korea * 14: Joseph G. Altonji, Fumio Hayashi, and Laurence Kotlikoff: The Effects of Income and Wealth on Time and Money Transfers between Parents and Children * 15: Anne Laferrère: Housing Inheritance: An Empirical Analysis of French Data
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