scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

Evaluating the Financial Performance of Pension Funds

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In the early 1980s, the structure of arrangements to provide retirement income has gradually moved from defined benefit (DB) systems to various types of arrangements in which the provision of pensions is backed by assets, either in individual accounts or in collective schemes as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Since the early 1980s, the structure of arrangements to provide retirement income has gradually moved from defined benefit (DB) systems to various types of arrangements in which the provision of pensions is backed by assets, either in individual accounts or in collective schemes. This change has been motivated principally by governments seeking to lessen the fiscal impact of aging populations and to diversify the sources of retirement income. One of the key results is that many pension systems are now in the process of becoming asset backed. This increasingly links retirement incomes to the performance of these assets, resulting in participants being exposed to the uncertainties of investment markets to determine the level of benefits that they will ultimately receive. The potential consequences of this have never been more evident than during the recent global financial crisis. This introductory chapter provides an overview of the issues and motivation for this work and summarizes the studies that were conducted and their main findings. It concludes with policy-related observations that arise from the overall consideration of the research program. The remainder of the volume contains a selection of the studies undertaken through the partnership that focus on developing approaches to evaluate performance of pension funds and concludes with observations and commentary from four noted experts in the field on the issues raised by this work and the interpretation of the findings.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Posted Content

Financial Development in Latin America and the Caribbean : The Road Ahead [El desarrollo financiero en América Latina y el Caribe : el camino por delante]

TL;DR: The authors in this article provide a stocktaking and forward looking assessment of the region's financial development, focusing on the main architectural issues, overall perspectives, and interconnections, and their value added of the report thus hinges on its holistic view of the development process, its broad coverage of the financial services industry, its emphasis on benchmarking, its systemic perspective, and its explicit effort to incorporate the lessons from the recent global financial crisis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global Pension Systems and Their Reform : Worldwide Drivers, Trends, and Challenges

TL;DR: This article reviewed recent and ongoing key changes that are triggering reforms and outlined the main reform trends across pension pillars, identifying a few areas on which the pension reform community will need to focus to make a difference.
Report SeriesDOI

Assessing Default Investment Strategies in Defined Contribution Pension Plans

TL;DR: In this article, the relative performance of different investment strategies for different structures of the payout phase was assessed. And the authors concluded that there is no "one-size-fits-all" default investment option.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Pricing of Options and Corporate Liabilities

TL;DR: In this paper, a theoretical valuation formula for options is derived, based on the assumption that options are correctly priced in the market and it should not be possible to make sure profits by creating portfolios of long and short positions in options and their underlying stocks.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Persistence of Mutual Fund Performance

TL;DR: This article analyzed how mutual fund performance relates to past performance and found evidence that differences in performance between funds persist over time and that this persistence is consistent with the ability of fund managers to earn abnormal returns.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lifetime Portfolio Selection under Uncertainty: The Continuous-Time Case

TL;DR: In this paper, the combined problem of optimal portfolio selection and consumption rules for an individual in a continuous-time model was examined, where his income is generated by returns on assets and these returns or instantaneous "growth rates" are stochastic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Substitution, Risk Aversion, and the Temporal Behavior of Consumption and Asset Returns: A Theoretical Framework

Larry G. Epstein, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1989 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, a class of recursive, but not necessarily expected utility, preferences over intertemporal consumption lotteries is developed, which allows risk attitudes to be disentangled from the degree of inter-temporal substitutability, leading to a model of asset returns in which appropriate versions of both the atemporal CAPM and the inter-time consumption-CAPM are nested as special cases.
Book

The Malliavin Calculus and Related Topics

David Nualart
TL;DR: The Malliavin calculus as mentioned in this paper is an infinite-dimensional differential calculus on a Gaussian space, originally developed to provide a probabilistic proof to Hormander's "sum of squares" theorem, but it has found a wide range of applications in stochastic analysis.
Related Papers (5)