1st Edition

Building Social Security Volume 6, The Challenge of Privatization

Edited By Xenia Scheil-Adlung Copyright 2001
    330 Pages
    by Routledge

    332 Pages
    by Routledge

    In recent years, in both the specialist press and the tabloids, the idea of privatization of social security has become a shimmering catch phrase. Politicians base election campaigns on promises of more or less privatization in social security. Many governments introduce private business management methods into their social security systems. Representatives of social security institutions and academics prepare theory papers on the possible outcomes of privatization. And international financial organizations describe doomsday scenarios based on the premise of failure to privatize.What is the role of privatization today in the development of national social security systems? How does privatization concern the developments in different social security programs such as old age, sickness, unemployment, accident insurance and family allowances? What are the visions and effects of privatization in social security?This volume provides an overview of the various positions of supporters and opponents of privatization in the main branches of social security, followed by national experience of privatized or part-privatized social security systems. While the perspective of each of the contributors is markedly different, the overall objective cuts across differences: namely, to develop the most efficient and cost-effective system of social security protection.The authors' views and knowledge are derived from their firsthand experiences with social security in Africa, Asia, the Americas and Europe. Representatives of the leading international organizations dealing with social security issues-the International Labour Organization, the OECD, the World Bank and the World Health Organization-further expand the parameters of the viewpoints and experiences expressed.This multifaceted book allows the reader to learn about the challenge of privatization in the various forms of social security by assembling a set of highly up-to-date, technically complex and legal issues based on practical analysis and actual experience. It will be of interest to those concerned with national social policy in a comparative context. This is the sixth volume in an ongoing series that aims to review social security in a comparative, global context. Xenia Scheil-Adlung is program manager, International Social Security Association, Geneva, Switzerland.

    1: Privatization: Visions, Effects, and Challenges; 1: Social Security Privatization: Different Context—Different Discourse; 2: Privatization: More Individual Choice in Social Protection; 3: Africa: Implications of Privatization Measures Initiated by International Financing Organizations; 2: Privatization: An Organizing Principle for Financing Social Security; 4: The Case for Funded, Individual Accounts in Pension Reform; 5: Individual Accounts Versus Social Insurance: A United States Perspective; 6: Strengthening Public Pensions with Private Investment—Canada’s Approach to Privatization Pressures; 3: Privatization: A Tool for Governance?; 7: Germany: Efficiency and Affordability in Social Security through Partial Privatization of Provision for Risks; 8: Privatization: From Panacea to Poison Pill—The Dutch Paradigm; 9: Healthy Markets-Sick Patients? Effects of Recent Trends on the Health Care Market; 10: Social Health Insurance Development in Low-Income Developing Countries: New Roles for Government and Nonprofit Health Insurance Organizations in Africa and Asia; 4: The Empirical Framework: National Experiences of Privatization in Various Branches of Social Security; 11: The Privatization of Pensions in Latin America and Its Impacts on the Insured, the Economy and Old-Age People; 12: First Experiences with the Privatization of the Polish Pension Scheme: A Status Report; 13: Austria’s Discussion on Social Security Privatization: Some Notes Focusing on Old-Age Insurance; 14: The Evolution of Public and Private Insurance in Sweden during the 1990s; 15: Tunisian Health Insurance: Towards Complementarity of Public and Private Sector; 16: Impact of Private Sector Involvement in Health Insurance in Uruguay: A Status Report; 17: China: From Public Health Insurance to a Multi-Tiered Structure; 18: Impacts of Private Sector Involvement in Health Insurance in Indonesia; 19: Trends in Private Sector Involvement in the Delivery of Workforce Development Services in the United States; 20: Changes in Employment Services through Deregulation; 21: The Privatization of Accident Compensation in New Zealand; 22: The Advantages of Statutory over Private Employment Accident Insurance: The Example of Germany; 23: The Danish Experience with Privatization: New ways of Solving Tasks

    Biography

    Xenia Scheil-Adlung