Synopsis
This book explores how rising pension and healthcare costs, along with workforce aging, are affecting pension and retirement planning around the world. Many middle-aged workers, now, realize that they will have to work longer than intended, as they begin to recognize that their retirement resources will be inadequate to finance retirement consumption. Volatile capital markets, rising medical-care costs, and low saving rates make retirement behavior and policy a moving target. Olivia Mitchell, executive director of The Pension Research Council at Wharton, and Robert L. Clark, Professor of Business Management and Economics at North Carolina State University, explore these themes with colleagues, touching on a diverse set of issues ranging from employment trends to pension accounting and investment, to retirement system overhaul. They illustrate how employers are actively reformulating the meaning of work and retirement, seeking to encourage more people to work longer than ever before, in
About the Author
Robert L. Clark is a Professor of Business Management and Economics at North Carolina State University. His research examines retirement decisions, the choice between defined benefit and defined contribution plans, the role of information and communications on 401(k) contributions, and international retirement systems. Dr. Clark serves ont he Advisory Board of the Pension Research Council, and he is also a member of the American Economic Association, the Gerontological Society of America, and the National Academy of Social Insurance. Professor Clark earned the BA from Millsaps College and the PhD from Duke University. Olivia S. Mitchell is the International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans Professor of Insurance and Risk Management, the Executive Director of the Pension Research Council, and the Director of the Boettner Center on Pensions and Retirement Research at the Wharton School. Concurrently Dr. Mitchell is a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and a CoInvestigator for the Health and Retirement Study at the University of Michigan. Dr. Mitchell's main areas fo research and teaching are private and public insurance, risk management, public finance and labor markets, and compensation and pensions, with an international focus. She received the BA in Economics from Harvard University and the MA and PhD degrees in Economics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.