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The Political Economy of Pension Financialisation addresses - for numerous countries - how and why pension reforms have come to rely more on financial markets, how public policy reacted to financial crises, and regulatory variation.
The book demonstrates how the process of pension financialisation reveals that pension policy is not only a social policy that affects retirement income, but also a financial policy that impacts savings rates, corporate finance and the economy. The chapters shed light on pre-funded private pensions as one key component of financialisation, as they turn savings into investments via financial services providers. Readers will also see how pension financialisation and the broader financialisation of the economy are here to stay, despite negative developments during and after the financial crisis.
A systematic and comparative overwiew of the financialisation of pensions, The Political Economy of Pension Financialisation is ideal for scholars and postgradues working on Political Economy, Public Policy and Finance. This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of European Public Policy.
Table of Contents
1. The political economy of pension financialisation: public policy responses to the crisis
Anke Hassel, Marek Naczyk And Tobias Wiß
2. Reinforcement of pension financialisation as a response to financial crises in Germany, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom
Tobias Wiß
3. Multipillarisation remodelled: the role of interest organisations in British and German pension reforms
Bernhard Ebbinghaus
4. Re-assessing the role of financial professionals in pension fund investment strategies
Margarita Gelepithis
5. Countering financial interests for social purposes: what drives state intervention in pension markets in the context of financialisation?
Pieter Tuytens
6. Insuring individuals. and politicians: financial services providers, stock market risk and the politics of private pension guarantees in Germany
Marek Naczyk And Anke Hassel
7. EU pension policy and financialisation: purpose without powers?
Waltraud Schelkle
8. Financialisation meets collectivisation: occupational pensions in Denmark, the Netherlands and Sweden
Karen Anderson