Pensions in DevelopmentThis title was first published in 2001. Challenging conventional approaches to the delivery of sustainable "social protection" to the elderly in developing countries (DCs) and assessing their implications, this work discusses the appropriateness of the public management of funded systems in DCs with relatively large formal sectors. The combination of social assistance approaches to social protection for the elderly facilitates the formation of an original unbiased "pensions in development" approach. Arguing for expeditious implementation of non-contributory tax (or aid) financed universal old-age "pensions" provision in all DCs and advocating industry flexibility and inclusivity, the book provides a treatment of a growing issue in worldwide development. |
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Our fifth contention is that the neoliberal assault on existing social and welfare policy has been too easily accepted. In relation to pension reform this neoliberal agenda has prioritised growth orientations over poverty alleviation ...
... of the effective marginalisation of the previously significant Geneva institutions, the ILO and the ISSA, the outcome is, in effect a monologue in favour of an increasingly narrow neoliberal version of an appropriate pension system.
... already well attuned to neoliberal and neoconservative assumptions, it was commonly accepted that the welfare state had become a drain on limited fiscal resources, a bottomless pit essentially diverting revenue from potentially more ...
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ما يقوله الناس - كتابة مراجعة
المحتوى
PublicPrivate Partnerships in Pillared Pension | |
Regional Responses Distilling Lessons from | |
Epitaph | |
Trends and Issues in Social | |
The Pension FundCapital Market Nexus | |
From Monologue | |
Appendix | |
Population Aged 60 Years or Older | |
ILO Tiered Pensions Model | |
Changes in Coverage in Selected SSA Countries | |
Bibliography | |
Index | |
Alternative Agendas for Least Developed Countries | |