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" The economic and financial market consequences of global ageing "
Kieran McMorrow, Werner Roeger.
Document Type
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BL
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Record Number
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745592
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Doc. No
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b565541
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Main Entry
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Kieran McMorrow, Werner Roeger.
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Title & Author
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The economic and financial market consequences of global ageing\ Kieran McMorrow, Werner Roeger.
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Publication Statement
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Berlin ; New York : Springer, ©2010.
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Series Statement
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European and transatlantic studies
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Page. NO
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xiv, 345 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
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ISBN
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3540248218
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: 3540405410
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: 3642073557
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: 9783540248217
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: 9783540405412
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: 9783642073557
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Contents
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One: Economic and Financial Market Consequences of Global Ageing.- Executive Overview.- Section 1: Global Demographic Trends and Forecasts 1950-2050.- Section 2: How is Ageing Likely to Impact Economically over the Next 50 Years: What are the Main Transmission Mechanisms?.- 2.1: Expenditure Pressures on the Public Finances.- 2.2: Demographic Change and Savings Behaviour.- Box 1: Demographic Change and Savings Behaviour: Theoretical Considerations and Empirical Evidence.- 2.3: Labour Supply Implications.- 2.4: Capital Accumulation and Total Factor Productivity.- 2.5: Interest Rate, Exchange Rate and Balance of Payments Developments.- Box 2: Overview of the Basic Theoretical Mechanisms in the Ageing Model.- Section 3: Global Capital Market Developments, Current Account Imbalances and the Evidence for Agerelated International Capital Flows.- 3.1: External Capital Movements: an Historical Perspective.- 3.1.1: Global Trends: 1870-2000: has the Degree and Nature of Capital Market Integration Changed Overtime?.- 3.1.2: Country Specific Developments: Overview of Capital Market Integration Trends for the EU, US, Japan, Fast Ageing and Slow Ageing Countries: 1970-1998.- Box 3: Gross Capital Movements: Indicator of Degree of Capital Market Openness.- 3.2: Demographics and Foreign Capital Flows: Have Age-Related Capital Movements Been a Feature of Recent Decades?.- 3.3: Future Trends in International Capital Movements.- Box 4: Tracking the Trend Evolution of Net Foreign Assets: Global Capital Market Restrictions and the Growing Concentration of Capital Flows into the Us.- Section 4: Global Ageing Scenario 2000-2050.- 4.1: Model Assumptions.- 4.2: Key Results.- Box 5: Comparison of Growth Rates of GDP, Population and Living Standards for the Period 1950-2000 with that of the Model's Central Scenario for 2000-2050.- Section 5: Policy Response: How Can the EU and the World as a Whole Effectively Deal with the Challenges of Ageing?.- 5.1: Dealing with Ageing - What Should be the Focus of EU Policy Reforms?.- Box 6: EU Budgetary Prudence: The Importance of Respecting the Stability and Growth Pact.- 5.2: Dealing with the International Financial Market Effects of Ageing: More Not Less Globalisation is Needed.- Box 7: Income Convergence: Theoretical and Empirical Evidence.- Detailed Summary of Main Points from Part 1.- Two: EU Pension Reform - an Overview of the Debate and an Empirical Assessment of the Main Policy Reform Options.- Executive Overview of Key Policy Conclusions.- Introductory Remarks.- Section 1: Overview of the Pension Reform Debate.- 1.1: Key Issues and Concepts.- 1.2: Main Driving Forces behind the Growing Calls for Pension Reform.- 1.2.1: Historical Analysis 1960-2000: What was the Role of Demographic, Labour Market and Generosity Factors in Determining the Past Growth of EU and us Public Pension Expenditure ?.- 1.2.2: Future Evolution 2000-2050: What are the Implications of Ageing for Growth and Pension Expenditure Trends in the EU and the us?.- 1.3: What are the Possible Policy Solutions?.- Section 2: Description of Model Used to Assess the Pension Reform Options.- 2.1: Model's Central Scenario of the Growth and Pension Expenditure Implications in the EU of Ageing Populations (2000-2050).- 2.2: Assessing the Explanatory Power of the Ageing Model: A Comparison with the Pension Projections from the EU's Economic Policy Committee.- 2.3: Criteria for Evaluating the Effectiveness of the Various PAYG and Systemic Pension Reform Options Analysed in Sections 3 to 5.- Section 3: PAYG System: Economic Assessment of the Main Parametric / Labour Market Reform Options: What is needed to Bring the System Back into Equilibrium?.- 3.1: Changes to the Generosity of the PAYG System (Partial V Full Shift from Wage to Price Indexation).- 3.2: An Increase in the Effective Retirement Age.- 3.3: Broad Package of "Payg" Reforms: Labour Market + Generosity + Retirement Age Changes.- Section 4: Systemic Reform: 2 Key Factors to be Considered: Internal Rates of Return + Transition Burden.- 4.1: Forecasts for the Internal Rate of Return of the PAYG + Funded Pension Systems: 2000-2050 (Central Scenario + Sensitivity Analysis).- 4.2: Forecasts for the Transition Burden in 2000 and its Evolution to 2050 (Central Scenario + Sensitivity Analysis).- Section 5: Economic Assessment of a Full / Partial Shift to Funding.- 5.1: 100% Shift to Funding: Compulsory Savings Option.- 5.2: 100% Shift to Funding: Voluntary Savings Option.- 5.3: Partial Shift to Funding + Stabilisation of PAYG System.- Section 6: An "Optimal" EU Pension Reform Strategy.- 6.1: Basic Policy Options with Regard to Public Pension Systems.- 6.2: Optimal Package of Reforms + Two Stage Transition Path.- Box 1: "Optimal" Policy Strategy: Maximising the Growth Rate Effects from Reform.- Detailed Summary of Main Points from Part 2.- Three: Annexes.- Annex 1: Member States Analysis.- Annex 2: Detailed Description of Ageing Model.- Annex 3: Basic Data on Savings, Wealth Holdings and Retirement Income Financing.- Annex 4: Results of Comparable Ageing Studies.- Annex 5: Prefunding within the PAYG System: Intergenerational Equity Objective.- List of Graphs.- List of Tables.- References.
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Abstract
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This book provides estimates of the very significant economic and financial market effects of ageing populations both at the EU and global levels. It stresses that if policies do not change, and especially if labour market reforms are not rapidly and systematically introduced, then the countries affected will experience a very sharp downturn in the growth of their living standards and in their underlying potential growth rates.--Jacket.
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Subject
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Age distribution (Demography) -- Economic aspects.
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Subject
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Aging -- Economic aspects.
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Subject
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Economic forecasting.
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LC Classification
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HB1531.K547 2010
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Added Entry
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Kieran McMorrow
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Werner Roeger
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