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E-raamat: How to Pool Risks Across Generations: The Case for Collective Pensions

(Professor of Philosophy, Rutgers-New Brunswick)
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How to Pool Risks across Generations makes the case for the collective provision of pensions, on fair terms of social cooperation. Through the insurance of a mutual association which extends across society and over multiple generations, we share one another's fates by pooling risks across both space and time. Resources are transferred, not simply between different people, but also within the possible future lives of each person: from one's more fortunate to one's less fortunate future selves. The book opens with an investigation of the longevity and investment risk that even a single individual on a desert island would face in providing for her old age. From this atomistic starting point, it builds up, within and across the chapters, to increasingly collective forms of pension provision. By joining together, it is possible to tame the risks we would face as individuals each with our own private pension pot. A collective pension can be justified as a 'social union of social
unions': an enduring corporate body, which is formed by agreements to pool risks, in a manner that involves reciprocity between the various individuals that constitute the collective. Even though all individuals age and die, a collective pension scheme remains evergreen, as the average age of members remains relatively unchanged, through the influx of new members to replace those who retire. It is therefore possible to smooth risks indefinitely across as well as within generations, to the mutual advantage of each.

Arvustused

How to Pool Risks across Generations challenges us to reimagine how we can bring philosophy to bear on important, real-world issues that affect our lives. Otsuka masterfully brings together these issues. * Ezekiel Vergara, Journal of Applied Philosophy *


Introduction
1. The Case for Collective Defined Contribution
2. The Case for a Funded Pension with a Defined Benefit
3. The Case for an Unfunded Pay as You Go Pension
4. Fair Terms of Social Cooperation among the Free and Equal
Conclusion
Appendix: How Should Pensions and Contributions be Linked to Salary?
References
Michael Otsuka is a Professor of Philosophy and a Core Scholar in the Center for Population-Level Bioethics at Rutgers University-New Brunswick. He has also taught at the London School of Economics, University College London, and UCLA. He obtained a BA in Political Science from Yale and a B.Phil in Philosophy and D.Phil in Politics from Oxford, the latter under the supervision of G. A. Cohen. He is the author of Libertarianism without Inequality (OUP 2003). In 2021-22, he served as a union negotiator on behalf of the 200,000 active members of the UK-wide Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS).