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Population ageing, pensions and growth intertemporal trade-offs and consumption planning John Creedy, Ross Guest.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: Cheltenham, UK ; Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar, c2009.Description: xv, 299 p. : ill. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781848445314 (hbk.)
  • 1848445318 (hbk.)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 331.252 22 CRE
Contents:
Contents: Part I: Introduction 1. Introduction Part II: Discounting and Time Preference 2. Discounting and Time Preference 3. The Elasticity of Marginal Valuation 4. Sustainable Preferences 5. Representative Agent and Social Planner Part III: Pensions and Taxation 6. Pension Tax, Savings and Labour Supply 7. Private Pensions and Savings Part IV: Population Ageing 8. Tax Smoothing and Population Ageing 9. Demographic Change in OECD Countries 10. Capital Intensity and Productivity 11. Extensions and Sensitivity Analyses Bibliography Index
Summary: This highly topical book explores key issues in evaluating the long-run implications of population ageing for pensions, taxation, intergenerational equity and social welfare. Societies face long-term phenomena, such as demographic change and climate change that impose costs and benefits far into the future. These present challenges for policymakers in planning intertemporal consumption paths that balance the goals of efficiency and equity. An exploration of these issues, with respect to population ageing in particular, is the primary motivation for this book. John Creedy and Ross Guest evaluate these problems with a particular focus on the role of concepts, assumptions and value judgements. This book will be a fascinating read for researchers interested in the social evaluation of population ageing and climate change. Public policy makers and advisers will find the analysis of practical policy questions such as alternative regimes for taxing public pensions of special interest. Graduate students of macroeconomics and public economics will also find helpful discussions of social discounting, the efficiency and equity effects of tax smoothing, and potential new effects of population ageing on labour productivity.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
General Books General Books CUTN Central Library Social Sciences Non-fiction 331.252 CRE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 43354

Contents:

Part I: Introduction

1. Introduction

Part II: Discounting and Time Preference

2. Discounting and Time Preference

3. The Elasticity of Marginal Valuation

4. Sustainable Preferences

5. Representative Agent and Social Planner

Part III: Pensions and Taxation

6. Pension Tax, Savings and Labour Supply

7. Private Pensions and Savings Part IV: Population Ageing

8. Tax Smoothing and Population Ageing

9. Demographic Change in OECD Countries

10. Capital Intensity and Productivity

11. Extensions and Sensitivity Analyses

Bibliography

Index

This highly topical book explores key issues in evaluating the long-run implications of population ageing for pensions, taxation, intergenerational equity and social welfare.

Societies face long-term phenomena, such as demographic change and climate change that impose costs and benefits far into the future. These present challenges for policymakers in planning intertemporal consumption paths that balance the goals of efficiency and equity. An exploration of these issues, with respect to population ageing in particular, is the primary motivation for this book. John Creedy and Ross Guest evaluate these problems with a particular focus on the role of concepts, assumptions and value judgements.

This book will be a fascinating read for researchers interested in the social evaluation of population ageing and climate change. Public policy makers and advisers will find the analysis of practical policy questions such as alternative regimes for taxing public pensions of special interest. Graduate students of macroeconomics and public economics will also find helpful discussions of social discounting, the efficiency and equity effects of tax smoothing, and potential new effects of population ageing on labour productivity.

Includes bibliographical references (p. 273-288) and index.

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