Occupational pensions in Germany: an economic geography

<p>By the end of the twentieth century, the generous German public pay-as-you-go pension system had been struggling with a serious deficit due to the country’s ageing population. In 2001, the German government enacted the “Riester” pension reform, named after Mr. Walter Riester, the Labour Min...

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Autor principal: Burger, C
Outros Autores: Clark, G
Formato: Tese
Idioma:English
Publicado em: 2011
Assuntos:
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author Burger, C
author2 Clark, G
author_facet Clark, G
Burger, C
author_sort Burger, C
collection OXFORD
description <p>By the end of the twentieth century, the generous German public pay-as-you-go pension system had been struggling with a serious deficit due to the country’s ageing population. In 2001, the German government enacted the “Riester” pension reform, named after Mr. Walter Riester, the Labour Minister brokering it, which reduced the level of publicly provided pensions, and strengthened the funded occupational and private pillars in order to replace the loss in retirement income.</p><p>This thesis investigates the role and structure of occupational pensions during the Riester-reform and in its aftermath, using an economic geography perspective. In doing so, it discusses the role of trade unions and employer associations (social partners) in moulding the structure of the occupational system, and investigates the geography of occupational pensions both at employer and at employee level. Empirically, the thesis is based on an in-depth interview with Mr. Walter Riester, and a unique, proprietary data-set of a German occupational pension provider, containing information on 332 thousand employees and over 12 thousand employers.</p><p>The results show that the internal division of social partners played a critical role in leaving occupational pensions voluntary, but they have been successful in setting standards on the occupational pension market by means of collective bargaining. Employers and employees show systematic spatiotemporal patterns in their pension-related decisions, confirming the importance of local relationships and local contexts in implementing social partners’ measures and in the transformation of the welfare state. It is finally pointed out that the Riester-reform was a part of a gradual transition, which has been reducing employers’ autonomy in order to reinforce the social role of occupational pensions. To achieve that and to catalyse the reform process, employers’ and employees’ risk exposure has been mitigated in the hope that old-age poverty can be avoided.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:94e64b94-3bf7-4fb6-b8f5-102a472f4be72022-03-26T23:42:32ZOccupational pensions in Germany: an economic geographyThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:94e64b94-3bf7-4fb6-b8f5-102a472f4be7Public policyRetirementAgeingDemography and population ageingPensionsFinancial economicsEuropeFinanceHouseholdsEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2011Burger, CClark, GWójcik, D<p>By the end of the twentieth century, the generous German public pay-as-you-go pension system had been struggling with a serious deficit due to the country’s ageing population. In 2001, the German government enacted the “Riester” pension reform, named after Mr. Walter Riester, the Labour Minister brokering it, which reduced the level of publicly provided pensions, and strengthened the funded occupational and private pillars in order to replace the loss in retirement income.</p><p>This thesis investigates the role and structure of occupational pensions during the Riester-reform and in its aftermath, using an economic geography perspective. In doing so, it discusses the role of trade unions and employer associations (social partners) in moulding the structure of the occupational system, and investigates the geography of occupational pensions both at employer and at employee level. Empirically, the thesis is based on an in-depth interview with Mr. Walter Riester, and a unique, proprietary data-set of a German occupational pension provider, containing information on 332 thousand employees and over 12 thousand employers.</p><p>The results show that the internal division of social partners played a critical role in leaving occupational pensions voluntary, but they have been successful in setting standards on the occupational pension market by means of collective bargaining. Employers and employees show systematic spatiotemporal patterns in their pension-related decisions, confirming the importance of local relationships and local contexts in implementing social partners’ measures and in the transformation of the welfare state. It is finally pointed out that the Riester-reform was a part of a gradual transition, which has been reducing employers’ autonomy in order to reinforce the social role of occupational pensions. To achieve that and to catalyse the reform process, employers’ and employees’ risk exposure has been mitigated in the hope that old-age poverty can be avoided.</p>
spellingShingle Public policy
Retirement
Ageing
Demography and population ageing
Pensions
Financial economics
Europe
Finance
Households
Burger, C
Occupational pensions in Germany: an economic geography
title Occupational pensions in Germany: an economic geography
title_full Occupational pensions in Germany: an economic geography
title_fullStr Occupational pensions in Germany: an economic geography
title_full_unstemmed Occupational pensions in Germany: an economic geography
title_short Occupational pensions in Germany: an economic geography
title_sort occupational pensions in germany an economic geography
topic Public policy
Retirement
Ageing
Demography and population ageing
Pensions
Financial economics
Europe
Finance
Households
work_keys_str_mv AT burgerc occupationalpensionsingermanyaneconomicgeography