退休、养老金和正义:哲学分析Palgrave Macmillan,2017。作者:Mark Hyde和Rory Shand。46.148欧元。

IF 1 4区 经济学 Q3 BUSINESS, FINANCE
Andre Santos Campos, Zachariah Tailor
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引用次数: 0

摘要

马克•海德(Mark Hyde)和罗里•尚德(Rory Shand)的这本书非常有独创性,将退休养老金设计和政治理论这两个通常不相交的研究领域有趣地结合在一起。他们的出发点是对自由主义理论的坚定承诺,他们的目标是寻找最合适的基础,为既公平又有效的退休养老金计划辩护。其结果是对公共政策分析中养老金设计的自由规范理由的调查。这本书有五章,第一章是引言,最后一章是结论。在他们的分析中挑出自由的首要地位之后,引言概述了每章的机械结构:对所考虑的原则的自由意志主义和功利主义的解释汇集在古典自由主义的大保护伞下,而优先主义和运气平等主义的观点代表了自由平等主义阵营。以下三章分别分析了养老金设计的相关考虑标准:需求(第2章),沙漠(第3章)和公民身份(第4章)。需求和沙漠分别对应养老金计划的前两个传统支柱,作为其基本理由。对公民身份的一般自由理解被用来将这一探索联系在一起。Hyde和Shand在第2章的开头给出了需求的定义,即“在社会环境中,代理人发挥最佳功能所必需的资源和机会的‘最低门槛’”(第27-28页)。古典自由主义者,缩小到自由意志主义者和功利主义者,认为需求的满足是一种自愿的关注,与行使个人自由的能力密不可分。另一方面,主张平等的自由主义者则支持政府在满足需求、从而改善自由环境方面给予相当程度的支持。罗尔斯和德沃金(分别是优先主义和运气平等主义)在考虑适当的养老金设计之前不可避免地引入了准入,充足性和可持续性的评估标准。海德和尚德最后普遍支持全民养老金,因为这是为所有退休人员提供基本需求的最有效机制,尤其是那些接近最低生活标准的人。第三章论述经济沙漠。自由主义内部的对立立场得到承认,优先主义者和运气平等主义者在代理人责任的主题上被认为是分裂的。Hyde和Shand在评估各种现有养老金设计时,在安全性、包容性和适用性的标准下,支持广泛的运气平等主义立场,然后据此确定三个优先事项:中和野蛮运气、优化选择运气和确保待遇的一致性。提出了一项固定福利计划,该计划可以由国家按照无偿家务劳动的缴款率提供报酬作为补充。最后,公民权在社会保障文献中的地位被揭示出来。然后,作者探讨了他们选择的观点:自由主义、功利主义、罗尔斯对公民身份的理解(政治、公民和财产权利的融合),以及运气平等主义
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Retirement, Pensions and Justice: A Philosophical Analysis Palgrave Macmillan, 2017. By Mark Hyde and Rory Shand. €46. 148 pages.
Mark Hyde and Rory Shand’s book is a remarkably original and interesting admixture of two fields of study that do not often intersect: retirement pension design and political theory. Their starting point is a solid commitment to liberal theory, and their objective is to trace the most appropriate foundations for justifying retirement pension schemes that are both fair and efficient. The result is an inquiry into liberal normative justifications for pension designs within public policy analysis. The book has five chapters, the first being the introduction, the last, the conclusion. After singling out the primacy of liberty in their analysis, the introduction outlines each chapter’s mechanical structure: libertarian and utilitarian interpretations of the principles under consideration are pooled under the wide umbrella of classical liberalism, whilst prioritarian and luck egalitarian perspectives represent the liberal egalitarian camp. The following three chapters each analyse a relevant standard of consideration for pension design: need (Chapter 2), desert (Chapter 3) and citizenship (Chapter 4). Need and desert correspond respectively to the first two traditional pillars of pension schemes, functioning as their underlying justifications. A general liberal understanding of citizenship is deployed to tie together this exploration. Hyde and Shand open Chapter 2 with a definition of need as “the ‘minimum threshold’ of resources and opportunities that are necessary for agents to function optimally in a social context” (pp. 27–28). Classical liberals, narrowed down to libertarians and utilitarians, view the satisfaction of need as a voluntary concern tied inextricably to the ability to exercise one’s freedom. Egalitarian liberals, on the other hand, endorse a considerable level of state support in satisfying need and hence improving the circumstances of liberty. Rawls and Dworkin (prioritarian and luck egalitarian, respectively) are inevitably introduced before appropriate pension designs are considered under the assessment criteria of access, adequacy and sustainability. Hyde and Shand conclude with a general endorsement of a universal citizen’s pension on account of being the most efficient available mechanism to provide for basic needs for all retirees, especially those closer to a minimum standard of living. Chapter 3 tackles economic desert. Contrasting positions within liberalism are acknowledged, and a split is considered between prioritarians and luck egalitarians on the topic of agent responsibility. Hyde and Shand endorse a broadly luck egalitarian stance when assessing various existing pension designs under the criteria of security, inclusiveness, and fittingness and then, accordingly, identify three priorities: neutralizing brute luck, optimizing option luck, and ensuring consistency of treatment. A defined benefit scheme is proposed, which could be complemented by state-provided remuneration along the lines of a contribution rate for unpaid domestic work. Penultimately, the place of citizenship within the literature on social security is brought to light. The authors then explore their chosen perspectives: libertarian, utilitarian, a Rawlsian understanding of citizenship (the amalgamation of political, civil and property rights), and a luck egalitarian
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CiteScore
4.20
自引率
8.30%
发文量
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