Fr. 77.00

Retirement, Pensions and Justice - A Philosophical Analysis

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book addresses the tendency to mischaracterise liberalism as a "neoliberal" reform project, arguing that liberal political philosophy is concerned only to sustain the conditions that make individual freedom possible. This is illustrated with reference to the design of pensions. Considered in terms of liberal justice, retirement systems require redistributive transfers to help the poor, measures to ensure that retirees are rewarded on their merits, and provisions that treat everyone with equal dignity and respect. Rather than presenting liberal pensions as a close analogue to neoliberalism, this volume highlights their egalitarian virtues. This book will appeal to scholars of retirement and pensions, social policy, economics and political philosophy.

List of contents

Chapter 1: Liberty, Equality or Fraternity? A "Liberal" Approach to the Design of Pension?- Chapter 2: Need and Just Pension Design.- Chapter 3: Desert and Just Pension Design.- Chapter 4: Citizenship and Just Pension Design.- Chapter 5: Conclusion.

About the author

Mark Hyde
is a Reader in Work and Pensions at the University of Plymouth, UK. His most recent work on the privatisation of pensions has included several books and monographs:
The Marketization of Social Security
(2001),
The Privatization of Mandatory Retirement Income Protection
(2006),
The Intergenerational Covenant
(2010),
Classical Liberalism and Conservatism
(2014) and, most recently,
Rent-Seeking in Private Pensions: Concentration, Pricing and Performance
(2016).

Rory Shand
is a Senior Lecturer in Public Services at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. His research has generated publications in several fields including the nature and scope of enterprise in a public services setting, the political philosophy of the public good, and disability as a form of social stratification. His most recent books include
The Governance of Sustainable Rural Renewal
(2016) and
Sport, Community Regeneration, Governance and Development
(2017). 

Summary

This book addresses the tendency to mischaracterise liberalism as a “neoliberal” reform project, arguing that liberal political philosophy is concerned only to sustain the conditions that make individual freedom possible. This is illustrated with reference to the design of pensions. Considered in terms of liberal justice, retirement systems require redistributive transfers to help the poor, measures to ensure that retirees are rewarded on their merits, and provisions that treat everyone with equal dignity and respect. Rather than presenting liberal pensions as a close analogue to neoliberalism, this volume highlights their egalitarian virtues. This book will appeal to scholars of retirement and pensions, social policy, economics and political philosophy.

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