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Administrative aspects of investment-based social security reform [electronic resource] / edited by John B. Shoven.

Contributor(s): Shoven, John B.
Material type: TextTextSeries: Conference report (National Bureau of Economic Research): Publisher: Chicago : University of Chicago Press, c2000Description: 1 online resource (ix, 236 p.).ISBN: 0226754812 (electronic bk.); 9780226754819 (electronic bk.).Subject(s): Privatization -- United States -- Congresses | Social security -- United States -- Congresses | Social security -- United States -- Finance -- Congresses | Seguridad social -- Estados Unidos -- Congresos | Seguridad social -- Estados Unidos -- Finanzas -- Congresos | POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Public Policy -- Social Security | Sociale zekerheid | Investeringen | Privatisering | Bestuurlijke aspecten | პრივატიზაცია აშშ ფინანსები აშშ კონფერენციის მასალებიGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Administrative aspects of investment-based social security reform.DDC classification: 368.4/3/00973 LOC classification: HD7125 | .A37 2000ebOnline resources: EBSCOhost
Contents:
Reforming social security / Fred T. Goldberg Jr. and Michael J. Graetz -- Administering a cost-effectice national program of personal security accounts / Sylvester J. Schieber and John B. Shoven -- Mutual funds and institutional investments / Estelle James, Gary Ferrier, James Smalhout, and Dimitri Vittas -- Administrative costs and equilibrium charges with individual accounts / Peter Diamond -- Costs of annuitizing retirement payouts from individual accounts / James M. Poterba and Mark J. Warshawsky -- Panel session / Robert Pozen, Joel M. Dickson, F. Gregory Ahern, Frederick L.A. Grauer, and Shaun Mathews.
Summary: Social security reform in the United States continues to be a pressing and contentious issue, with advocates touting some form of a centralized or a privatized system of personal accounts. In general, centralized systems offer low administrative costs, but are potentially subject to political mismanagement and appropriation. Privatized account systems, on the other hand, offer higher yields with more flexibility, but may prove too expensive and logistically daunting to implement. Uniting learned and outspoken proponents on both sides of the debate, this volume provides the first comprehensive analysis of the issues involved in administering a system of essentially private social security accounts. The contributors together come to startlingly similar conclusions, generally agreeing that a centralized system of accounts could deliver the benefits of privatization in a feasible and cost-efficient way by accessing administrative mechanisms already in existence. This is perhaps the most far-reaching synthesis yet envisioned of functional and implementable social security reform.
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ელ.რესურსი ელ.რესურსი ეროვნული სამეცნიერო ბიბლიოთეკა 1
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Includes bibliographical references and indexes.

Reforming social security / Fred T. Goldberg Jr. and Michael J. Graetz -- Administering a cost-effectice national program of personal security accounts / Sylvester J. Schieber and John B. Shoven -- Mutual funds and institutional investments / Estelle James, Gary Ferrier, James Smalhout, and Dimitri Vittas -- Administrative costs and equilibrium charges with individual accounts / Peter Diamond -- Costs of annuitizing retirement payouts from individual accounts / James M. Poterba and Mark J. Warshawsky -- Panel session / Robert Pozen, Joel M. Dickson, F. Gregory Ahern, Frederick L.A. Grauer, and Shaun Mathews.

Social security reform in the United States continues to be a pressing and contentious issue, with advocates touting some form of a centralized or a privatized system of personal accounts. In general, centralized systems offer low administrative costs, but are potentially subject to political mismanagement and appropriation. Privatized account systems, on the other hand, offer higher yields with more flexibility, but may prove too expensive and logistically daunting to implement. Uniting learned and outspoken proponents on both sides of the debate, this volume provides the first comprehensive analysis of the issues involved in administering a system of essentially private social security accounts. The contributors together come to startlingly similar conclusions, generally agreeing that a centralized system of accounts could deliver the benefits of privatization in a feasible and cost-efficient way by accessing administrative mechanisms already in existence. This is perhaps the most far-reaching synthesis yet envisioned of functional and implementable social security reform.

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