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Pension Funding with Moving Average Rates of Return

Scandinavian Actuarial Journal, 2001
In the context of the model of pension funding introduced by Dufresne in 1986, explicit expressions are found for the first two moments of fund level and total contributions, when (1) actuarial gains and losses are amortized over N years, and (2) arithmetic rates of return on assets form a moving average process.
Diane Bédard, Daniel Dufresne
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Moving average rates of return and the variability of pension contributions and fund levels for a defined benefit pension scheme

Insurance: Mathematics and Economics, 1997
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Haberman, Steven, Wong, Patrick Lam Yuk
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Pension plan spending at chemical firms above average

Chemical & Engineering News Archive, 1984
Chemical industry pension funds remain, as they have been for at least the past several years, some of the most generously funded and the most strongly financed among the nation's largest industrial and service firms. The sixth annual survey of Fortune 500 industrial and 200 service companies by Johnson & Higgins, a New York City insurance firm, shows ...
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Corporate reputation, trait covariation and the averaging principle ‐ The case of the UK pensions mis‐selling scandal

European Journal of Marketing, 2001
Presents the results of an empirical investigation into whether the attribution by members of the public of an unfavourable reputational trait (e.g. dishonesty) to a company covaries with other traits ascribed to the same enterprise. Additionally it examines whether people aggregate successive pieces of unfavourable information received about a ...
Roger Bennett, Helen Gabriel
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Ageing population and Spanish pension system reforms: Effects on average pensions and inequality among pensioners

2009
An ageing population is prompting the reform of pension systems. The Spanish pension system has undergone two consecutive reforms and a third one is currently being taking into consideration. All three involve the lengthening of the period used to calculate the size of pensions.
de Pedraza, Pablo   +2 more
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Longevity gap, indexation and age-specific average pensions

2022
Studying the age-dimension of the probability distribution of pensions while assuming steadily rising real wages and time-invariant benefit-rules, two factors play important roles: (i) the weight of the wages in indexation of benefits in progress; (ii) the longevity gap. Factor (i) acts against relative depreciation of older benefits, while factor (ii)
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Rich pensioner, poor pensioner : the income trade off dilemma between working and retirement life stages for average Australian income earners retiring between July 2000 and July 2016 [PDF]

open access: possible
Between July 2000 and July 2016 around 3.5 million Australian citizens and residents will reach a minimum age pension age with, on average, considerable remaining life expectancy. Contemporary policy settings would lead this demographic group to expect to enter and remain within an environment of near universal access to an age or similar pension ...
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