Bibliographic Information

Prospects for social security reform

edited by Olivia S. Mitchell, Robert J. Myers, and Howard Young

University of Pennsylvania Press, c1999

Available at  / 37 libraries

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Note

"Pension Research Council, the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania."

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The United States social security system is the nation's largest social insurance program. As such, it has a far-reaching impact throughout the economy, influencing not only old-age economic security but also many behaviors, including corporate employment policy, retirement patterns, and personal saving. In the past, the system's universal coverage and generous benefits ensured popular support to a degree enjoyed by no other form of "big government" social spending. Yet over two-thirds of all Americans today believe that the social security system will face bankruptcy by the time they retire. The question of social security reform-how to reform the system or whether the system needs reform at all-is the subject of heated debate at all levels of government, in the media, and among workers, pensioners, and employers. Prospects for Social Security Reform informs the debate by exploring why the system is at a crossroads today and what to do about it. Contributors detail the size and nature of the problem, explain views of key "stakeholders" regarding reform options, and report new evidence on how reform might affect the economy. Research findings and public opinion polls are analyzed, as are lessons from other countries experimenting with new ways to deliver old-age benefit promises. No other volume includes as diverse and expert a set of perspectives on reform and privatization as those gathered here from economists, actuaries, employers, investment managers, and representatives of organized labor. Among its chapters is the path-breaking study "Social Security Money's Worth," the 1999 winner of the TIAA-CREF's Paul A. Samuelson Award for Outstanding Scholarly Writing on Lifelong Financial Security.

Table of Contents

Preface PART I. WHAT IS THE SOCIAL SECURITY PROBLEM? 1. An Overview of the Issues 2. Measuring Solvency in the Social Security System 3. Criteria for Evaluating Social Security Reform 4. New Opportunities for the Social Security System PART II. ASSESSING THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF SOCIAL SECURITY 5. Social Security Money's Worth 6. Simulating Benefit Levels Under Alternative Social Security Reforms 7. Stochastic Simulation of Economic Growth Effects 8. Thinking About Social Security's Trust Fund 9. Government Guarantees for Old Age Income 10. Means Testing Social Security 11. Social Security and Employer Induced Retirement PART III. POLITICAL AND PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING SOCIAL SECURITY REFORM 12. Compliance in Social Security Systems Around the World 13. Employer Responses to Social Security Reform 14. An Actuarial Perspective on How Social Security Reform Could Influence Employer-Sponsored Pensions 15. An Organized Labor Perspective on Social Security Reform 16. Women as Widows Under a Reformed Social Security System 17. Investment and Administrative Constraints on Individual Social Security Accounts 18. Americans' Views of Social Security and Social Security Reforms Contributors Index

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