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Sunday July 5, 2009

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Past Event

Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center Symposium

Saving Private Pensions

Retirement, Saving, U.S. Economy


Event Summary

Private pensions should encourage workers and employers to save adequately for retirement and should provide the incentives in an efficient and equitable manner. Only half of U.S. workers have pensions, but the plans come at costs that can exceed $100 billion per year. Are the pension tax incentives worth the cost? Are workers using these tax incentives to provide an adequate nest egg for retirement? Are pension subsidies distributed fairly and properly targeted by income? Are the rules exposing workers to too much financial risk? How could the rules be simplified?

Event Information

When

Tuesday, May 06, 2003
2:00 PM to 4:30 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Map

Contact: Communications

E-mail: communications@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

Policymakers have focused a great deal of attention on pension issues. Most recently, on April 11, Representatives Rob Portman (R-OH) and Benjamin L. Cardin (D-MD) introduced major new legislation to alter many pension rules.

This Tax Policy Center symposium will examine the current status of the pension system and opportunities and alternatives for reform.

AGENDA

2:00-3:00 The Pension System and Alternative Paths to Reform
William Gale, Brookings and TPC
Peter Orszag, Brookings and TPC
3:00-4:00 Options for Reform
Jane Gravelle, Congressional Research Service
Mark Iwry, Brookings
Pamela Perun, Urban Institute

PAPERS AND PRESENTATIONS

Corporate Tax Disclosure at the State Level: The Massachusetts Experience [PDF— 242 KB]
Robert Tannenwald

What Can We Infer About a Firm's Taxable Income from its Financial Statements? [PDF— 147 KB] [PPT— 130 KB]
Michelle Hanlon

Bridging The Reporting Gap: A Proposal For More Informative Reconciling of Book and Tax Income [PDF— 161KB] [PPT— 101 KB]
Lillian F. Mills and George A. Plesko

Discussion of "What Can We Infer About a Firm's Taxable Income from its Financial Statements?" [PPT— 41 KB]
Michele Hanlon

Comments on "Bridging the Reporting Gap: A Proposal for MoreInformative Reconciling of Book and Tax Income? by L. Mills and G. Plesko [PDF— KB]
Mihir A. Desai

Transcript

MR. WILLIAM GALE: The way that I start to think about the pension system is to note that the onset of a lengthy retirement period is a relatively new phenomenon. A hundred years ago we would not have worried so much about providing for needs in retirement for the simple reason that not many people had lengthy retirement periods and those that did basically lived with the rest of their families and were supported by their families.

So it's actually a major social and economic achievement to have established a lengthy retirement period at the end of a working life. So in a sense pensions are sort of a good problem to have but they are still a problem and they raise a number of issues that need to be addressed.

That general issue combines with the aging of the population, the lengthening life span, and the imminent retirement of the baby boomers to give an urgency to all of these issues, especially when combined with observed low saving rates in the United States.

So thinking of pensions in the context of retirement income, people basically have four sources of income. Actually now that I think of this they have five sources. I'll mention the fifth in a second.

The most obvious is Social Security. Social Security provides a nearly universal and sort of a basic benefit. It was never meant to provide for all retirement needs and it certainly doesn't do that.

Panel 1 transcript(PDF—148KB)
Panel 2 transcript(PDF—162KB)


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