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Items 861 to 870 of 899

Safety net arrangements for elderly Africans
S. Devereux / Institute of Development Studies UK, 2001
Non-contributory state pensions were introduced in South Africa in 1928. Eligibility was extended to White Namibians in the 1940s but to African Namibians only in 1973. Initially motivated by a complex combination of welfarist ...
Pension Reform: Lessons from Latin America
M. Queisser / OECD Development Centre, 1999
There are benefits from Latin American pension reform, but they have been overestimated. The approaches taken in second-generation reforms and their still early results hold lessons for OECD and non-OECD countries alike. A partial shi...
Pension Fund Investment from Ageing to Emerging Markets
B. Fischer; H. Reisen / OECD Development Centre, 1994
The rapid ageing of populations in the rich economies can be expected to stimulate strong growth in private funded pensions, providing a massive potential of foreign finance for developing countries. Pension managers can reap big dive...
Stock market development and financial intermediaries : stylized facts
Demirguc - Kunt Asli; R Levine / Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 1995
The three most developed stock markets are in Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States, and the most underdeveloped markets are in Colombia, Nigeria, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe. Markets tend to be more developed in richer countri...
Models and theories of household are behaviour are unrealistic and of little use in the design of policies or projects
P. Mattila-Wiro / World Institute for Development Economics Research (WIDER), 1999
The aim of this paper is to review the principal assumptions and aspects of the unitary household model and collective models of household behaviour. Empirical studies are presented to assess whether the theories can offer adequate de...
Determinants and patterns of migration are best explained at a structural macrolevel
D. Nayyar / World Institute for Development Economics Research (WIDER), 2000
This article initially takes a historical look at international labour migration over the past fifty years and draws a distinction between different categories of labour flows in the contemporary world economy. The article stre...
Reforming Indonesia's Pension System
Chad Leechor / Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 1999
Key options for reforming Indonesia's pension system: reshape the mandatory defined contribution plan (Jamsostek), make employer sponsored pensions more attractive and affordable, and contain the fiscal burden of civil service plans (...
Husbands still have final say on family planning issues
M. Francis-Chizororo; N. Wekwete; M. Matshaka / Family Health International, 1999
Explores the roles of husbands and mothers-in-law in reproductive decision-making and women’s participation in development. It addresses the question of whether women and their families believe lower fertility should enable young...
Aging Trends: South Africa
International Programs Center, Population Division of the U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1997
This report summarizes the major demographic aspects affecting the aging of the South African population and highlights several socioeconomic characteristics that affect the wellbeing of older persons.
Gender and aging: demographic dimensions
International Programs Center, Population Division of the U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1997
Women are the majority of the older population in virtually all nations and face different circumstances and challenges than men as they age. Older women are more likely to be widowed, to live alone, and to live in poverty. Older wome...
Items 861 to 870 of 899

Items 861 to 743 of 743

How best to measure pension adequacy
A.G. Grech / Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion, Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economic and R, 2013
Though the main benchmark used to assess pension reforms continues to be the expected resulting fall in future government spending, the impact of policy changes on pension adequacy is increasingly coming to the for...
The design and implementation of public pension systems in developing countries: Issues and options
Program on the Global Demography of Aging, 2013
Developing countries are increasingly aware of the need to design and implement improvements in public systems for providing pensions to the elderly. Such systems may aim to smooth consumption and thus provide reliable income to older...
China’s pension system: a vision
World Bank, 2013
China is facing a dramatic ageing process and demographic transition as a result of declines in fertility combined with significant increases in longevity. Old-age dependency ratios are therefore projected to almost triple over three ...
Nutrition interventions for older people in emergencies
HelpAge International, 2013
In emergency situations, older people may find it hard to access food. For example, when they are displaced, older people may face difficulties in registering for the general food rations, meet challenges in accessing food distributio...
Asia’s demographic transition will adversely affect its economic growth
D. Park; K. Shin / Asian Development Bank, 2011
Population ageing affects growth through savings, capital accumulation, labour force participation, and total factor productivity. This paper examines the impact of ageing on those four channels in 12 developing Asian economies that c...
Rapid population ageing means challenges for Myanmar
HelpAge International, 2013
Myanmar’s population is beginning to age rapidly.  According to UN projections, by 2050 older people will comprise a quarter of Myanmar’s total population. Shortly after 2035, persons aged 60 and older will outnumber ...
Experiences of matching defined contribution pension schemes
World Bank, 2013
Matching defined contribution schemes are gaining popularity in both rich and poor countries as a promising means to reduce gaps in the participation in formal pension systems. Matching contributions by employers, the government, or b...
Youthquake: will Melanesian democracy be sunk by demography?
Pacific Institute of Public Policy, 2010
One area where there is similarity between the Middle East and Melanesia is demographics. Both have large, youthful populations that are tired of the status quo and leaders who have failed to manage change, including generational chan...
Slowing population growth in Malawi is essential for poverty reduction strategies to work
Ministry of Development Planning and Cooperation, Government of Malawi, 2012
Malawi adds over 400,000 people each year to its population. Without a reduction in the average number of births per woman, health, education and employment services will be overstretched. This trend will continue to challenge the cou...
Old age support in rural China
F. Cai; J. Giles; P.O. Keefe / World Bank, 2012
Although average incomes in China have risen dramatically since the 1980s, concerns are increasing that the rural elderly have not benefited from growth to the same extent as younger people and the urban elderly. This book explores th...
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Items 861 to 156 of 156

Ministry of Development Planning and Cooperation, Government of Malawi
The Ministry of Development Planning and Cooperation is Malawi Government's main planning agency responsible for national economic and development planning, and monitoring and evaluation of socio-economic issues in the country. Its main mandate is to provide professional advice and technical support to Government and the public on economic and social policy development and management so as to achi...
University of Western Australia
Asia-Pacific Intergovernmental Meeting on the Second Review and Appraisal of the Madrid International Plan of Action on Ageing, 2012
Review of Madrid Plan of  Action on Ageing
Long-Run Economic Perspectives of an Ageing Society (LEPAS)
The EU member countries will be increasingly populated by older people. Nearly 25 percent of people in the European Union in 2030 can be above age 65, up from about 17 percent in 2005. Europe's old-age dependency ratio (the number of people age 65 and older compared with the number of working-age people ages 15-64) could more than double by 2050, from one in every four to fewer than one in every t...
Department of Economics, Towson University
Centre for Ageing Research and Development in Ireland (CARDI)
CARDI is a not for profit organisation developed by leaders from the ageing field across Ireland (North and South) including age focused researchers, academics, statutory, voluntary and community sector representatives.  It aims to advocate for and advance the ageing research agenda by identifying, coordinating, stimulating, and communicating strategic research on ageing and older peopl...
HelpAge - job vacancies
Jobs with HelpAge
Population Aging Research Center, University of Pennsylvania
Research centre on ageing issues
Centre for Research in Economic Analysis
Economic integration issues
The Graying of AIDS
Resources on HIV/AIDS and the elderly
Items 861 to 156 of 156