Pension fund economics and finance : efficiency, investments and risk-taking

Bibliographic Information

Pension fund economics and finance : efficiency, investments and risk-taking

edited by Jacob A. Bikker

(Routledge international studies in money and banking, 93)

Routledge, 2018

  • : hbk

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Pension fund benefits are crucial for pensioners' welfare and pension fund savings have accumulated to huge amounts, covering a major part of world-wide institutional investments. However, the literature on pension fund economics and finance is rather limited, caused, in part, to limited data availability. This book contributes to this literature and focuses on three important areas. The first is pension fund (in)efficiency, which has a huge impact on final benefits, particularly when annual spoilage accumulates over a lifetime. Scale economies, pension plans complexity and alternative pension saving plans are important issues. The second area is investment behavior and risk-taking. A key question refers to the allocation of investments over high risk/high return and relatively safe assets. Bikker investigates whether pension funds follow the life-cycle hypothesis: more risk and return for pension funds with young participants. Many pension funds are rather limited in size, which may raise the question how financially sophisticated the pension fund decision makers are: rather professionals or closer to unskilled private persons? The third field concerns two regulation issues. How do pension fund respond to shocks such as unexpected investment returns or changes in life expectancy? What are the welfare implications to the beneficiary for different methods of securing pension funding: solvency requirements, a pension guarantee fund, or sponsor support? This groundbreaking book will challenge the way pension fund economics is thought about and practiced.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents Introduction, J.A. Bikker Part 1: Efficiency Is there an optimal pension fund size? A scale-economy analysis of administrative and investment costs, J.A. Bikker, The impact of scale, complexity, and service quality on the costs of pension funds: A cross-country comparison, J.A. Bikker, O.W. Steenbeek, F. Torracchi Cost differences between pension funds and life insurers in providing pensions, J.A. Bikker Part 2: Investments behavior and risk-taking The eligibility of emerging market bonds for pension fund portfolios, L. Spierdijk and Z. Umar. Mean reversion of stock prices and its impact on pension fund investment policies, L. Spierdijk, J.A. Bikker. Pension fund investment policy, risk taking, ageing and the life cycle hypothesis, J.A. Bikker, D. Broeders, D. Hollanders, E. Ponds, Investor sophistication and risk taking, J. de Dreu, J.A. Bikker. Investment risk-taking of institutional investors, J.K. Gorter, J.A Bikker. Part 3: Risk-taking and regulation Measuring and explaining implicit risk sharing in defined benefit pension funds, J.A. Bikker, T. Knaap, W. Romp, (11) Utility-equivalence of pension security mechanisms, D.W.G.A. Broeders, An Chen, and Birgit Schnorrenberg

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Details

  • NCID
    BB25679224
  • ISBN
    • 9781138656802
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Abingdon
  • Pages/Volumes
    xv, 256 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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