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Peter EpsteinOlga KaganovaKatharine Mark
Sally R. MerrillGretchen MikeskaRitu Nayyar-Stone
Rudolph G. PennerGeorge E. PetersonJuliana H. Pigey
Carol RabenhorstClare Romanik

 

Publications on International Issues

Viewing 1-5 of 355. Most recent posts listed first.Next Page >>

Unemployment and Unemployment Protection in Transition (Occasional Paper)
Vera Brusentsev, Wayne Vroman

This paper examines developments in aggregate income and the labor market of the 28 countries from Central and Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union (CEE-FSU) in the period from 1990 to 2006. Income, employment, unemployment and labor market support services are examined in tabulations and time series regressions. Comparisons are made with developments in major countries from other regions of the world.

Posted to Web: May 27, 2008Publication Date: April 01, 2008

The Effect of Private Health Insurance Coverage on Health Services Utilization in New Zealand (Research Report)
Linda J. Blumberg

Private health insurance can lead to interactive effects with the public health system. It is possible that care delivered under private insurance is not replacing public spending, but increasing total national spending on health care. And because comprehensive policies lower the out-of-pocket price for obtaining public services, this type of coverage may increase the use of those services, thereby increasing public spending. This study assesses the impact of private health insurance coverage on the use of health services in New Zealand, using 2002/2003 New Zealand Health Survey data.

Posted to Web: April 09, 2008Publication Date: July 01, 2006

An Urban-Rural Focus on Food Markets in Africa (Occasional Paper)
Clare Romanik

Africa's cities purchase much more food domestically than the continent imports or exports; they represent economic hope if rural and peri-urban producers learn to meet their particular food demands, including more meat, dairy, and processed foods. Increased efficiency will come with more onsite processing, contract enforcement, and distribution centers. Best practices from South Africa include the Johannesburg Fresh Produce Market and Thohoyandou Spar Supermarket requiring their agents to purchase a share of their fresh vegetables from small growers. Efforts to strengthen regulation and raise standards must remember that the urban poor depend on public markets, the informal sector and "inferior" products.

Posted to Web: January 30, 2008Publication Date: November 15, 2007

Stabilizing Future Fiscal Policy: It's Time to Pull the Trigger (Research Report)
Rudolph G. Penner, C. Eugene Steuerle

Fiscal policy is out of control. Programs, such as Social Security and Medicare, have design features that push up spending faster than the growth of revenues. It is time to change the course of the automatic pilot driving these programs. To do so, policymakers can develop “triggers” that automatically curb spending. Triggers will level the playing field between programs that have large automatic growth and those where growth or even maintenance of effort cannot be obtained without new legislation. The paper examines triggers employed to reform Social Security in other advanced democracies and explores design options for an optimal trigger.

Posted to Web: August 20, 2007Publication Date: August 01, 2007

Replacement Rates and UC Benefit Generosity (Research Report)
Wayne Vroman

This report presents an actuarial framework for examining the costs of unemployment compensation (UC) programs. The framework, derived in Section 1, emphasizes three factors: (1) the unemployment rate, (2) the recipiency rate (the share of the unemployed who collect UC benefits) and (3) the replacement rate (weekly benefits relative to weekly wages). Sections 2 and 3 examine replacement rates in 20 high income countries from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Section 2 examines empirical replacement rates while Section 3 compares the empirical estimates from Section 2 with estimates published by the OECD. The two estimates differ substantially, and analysis of the cause(s) of the differences is recommended.

Posted to Web: August 01, 2007Publication Date: July 19, 2007

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