Multipillarisation remodelled: the role of interest organizations in British and German pension reforms

Recent reforms have responded to demographic ageing and fiscal challenges by shifting toward the multipillarisation of pensions to achieve financial sustainability. Reforms towards privatization and marketization of retirement income provision occurred in Britain and Germany with different pension s...

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Main Author: Ebbinghaus, B
Format: Journal article
Published: Routledge 2019
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author Ebbinghaus, B
author_facet Ebbinghaus, B
author_sort Ebbinghaus, B
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description Recent reforms have responded to demographic ageing and fiscal challenges by shifting toward the multipillarisation of pensions to achieve financial sustainability. Reforms towards privatization and marketization of retirement income provision occurred in Britain and Germany with different pension system legacies. While public opinion supports largely the status quo, the stakeholders, in particular, organized capital and labour, have evolved in their positions towards pension reforms. The analysis seeks to draw out how organized interests have sought to influence mulitipillarisation but also adapted their strategies in the context of increasing financialisation in the two political economies. The position of trade unions, employers’ associations, social advocacy groups and the finance sector has increasingly embraced multipillarisation, earlier and more so in Britain than in Germany. A reversal of pension financialisation seems no longer possible but the inequalities and uncertainties need to be addressed in order to make multipillarisation politically sustainable.
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spelling oxford-uuid:76b269dc-d1f8-489c-8537-c07fc262377d2022-03-26T20:17:58ZMultipillarisation remodelled: the role of interest organizations in British and German pension reformsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:76b269dc-d1f8-489c-8537-c07fc262377dSymplectic Elements at OxfordRoutledge2019Ebbinghaus, BRecent reforms have responded to demographic ageing and fiscal challenges by shifting toward the multipillarisation of pensions to achieve financial sustainability. Reforms towards privatization and marketization of retirement income provision occurred in Britain and Germany with different pension system legacies. While public opinion supports largely the status quo, the stakeholders, in particular, organized capital and labour, have evolved in their positions towards pension reforms. The analysis seeks to draw out how organized interests have sought to influence mulitipillarisation but also adapted their strategies in the context of increasing financialisation in the two political economies. The position of trade unions, employers’ associations, social advocacy groups and the finance sector has increasingly embraced multipillarisation, earlier and more so in Britain than in Germany. A reversal of pension financialisation seems no longer possible but the inequalities and uncertainties need to be addressed in order to make multipillarisation politically sustainable.
spellingShingle Ebbinghaus, B
Multipillarisation remodelled: the role of interest organizations in British and German pension reforms
title Multipillarisation remodelled: the role of interest organizations in British and German pension reforms
title_full Multipillarisation remodelled: the role of interest organizations in British and German pension reforms
title_fullStr Multipillarisation remodelled: the role of interest organizations in British and German pension reforms
title_full_unstemmed Multipillarisation remodelled: the role of interest organizations in British and German pension reforms
title_short Multipillarisation remodelled: the role of interest organizations in British and German pension reforms
title_sort multipillarisation remodelled the role of interest organizations in british and german pension reforms
work_keys_str_mv AT ebbinghausb multipillarisationremodelledtheroleofinterestorganizationsinbritishandgermanpensionreforms