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008 091112s2009 xx ||||gr |0|| 0 eng d
100 1 _aHICKS, Alexander
_938297
245 1 0 _aPension income replacement :
_bpermanet and transitory determinants
260 _aOxfordshire :
_bRoutledge,
_cJanuary 2009
520 3 _aWe extend analysis of fine-graind measures of social policy benefit levels to pension policy, with health care policy the most costly and economically consequential of social policies. To do so we analyze public pension income replacement rates (IRRs) for 18 affluent democracies, 1975-2000, using error correction (EC) models that allow for distinct longer-run and shorter-run estimates that may be particularly important for pension benefits. Results from EC models indicate economic globalization (especially accelerating trade openness), high economic growth, and some varieties of domestic economic malaise (especially unemployment and public deficits). Also, where fixed-effect constraints on estimate precision are relaxed for temporally quasi-invariant explanatory variable using Plümper and Troeger's (2007) fixed-effect variance decomposition (or 'xtfevd') model, cumulative Right cabinet strengh, state-structural veto points and neocorporatism also figure in the limitation, if not reversal, of pension benefits.
590 _aEconomics, Pensions, Policy, Politics, Welfare
700 1 _aFREEMAN, Kendralin
_938298
773 0 8 _tJournal of European Public Policy
_g16, 1, p. 127-143
_dOxfordshire : Routledge, January 2009
_xISSN 13501763
_w
942 _cS
998 _a20091112
_b1542^b
_cDaiane
998 _a20091117
_b1604^b
_cCarolina
999 _aConvertido do Formato PHL
_bPHL2MARC21 1.1
_c30821
_d30821
041 _aeng