951 resultados para Social security Early retirement United States
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"September 1999."
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Includes bibliography
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"SSA Publication No. 13-11712"--P. of cover.
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Considers legislation to extend and improve the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance system, and to add disability protection. Includes H. Rpt. 80-2168, "Social Security Act Amendments, 1948," on H.R. 6777, June 2, 1948 (p. 1096-1158), pt.2.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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In this paper we analyze the effects of social security policies in an unfunded, earnings-related social security system on the incentives to education investment and voluntary retirement, on growth and on income inequality. Growth is endogenously driven by human capital investment, individuals differ in their innate (learning) ability at birth, and the pension scheme includes a minimum pension. More skilled individuals spend more on education, minimum pensions reduce low skill individuals' incentives to invest in human capital, there is no monotonic relationship between per capita growth and income inequality.
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This paper uses a survey experiment to examine differences in public attitudes toward 'direct' and 'indirect' government spending. Federal social welfare spending in the USA has two components: the federal government spends money to directly provide social benefits to citizens, and also indirectly subsidizes the private provision of social benefits through tax expenditures. Though benefits provided through tax expenditures are considered spending for budgetary purposes, they differ from direct spending in several ways: in the mechanisms through which benefits are delivered to citizens, in how they distribute wealth across the income spectrum, and in the visibility of their policy consequences to the mass public. We develop and test a model explaining how these differences will affect public attitudes toward spending conducted through direct and indirect means. We find that support for otherwise identical social programs is generally higher when such programs are portrayed as being delivered through tax expenditures than when they are portrayed as being delivered by direct spending. In addition, support for tax expenditure programs which redistribute wealth upward drops when citizens are provided information about the redistributive effects. Both of these results are conditioned by partisanship, with the opinions of Republicans more sensitive to the mechanism through which benefits are delivered, and the opinions of Democrats more sensitive to information about their redistributive effects.
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by Boris D. Bogen
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Vol. I. Next steps in the development of social statistics, by S. A. Rice and collaborators.--vol. II. A guide to the statistics of social trends in the United States, by Florence Du Bois.--vol. III. Guides to vital statistics in the United States, by Joseph V. De Porte.--vol. IV. A guide to statistical series relating to wages in the United States, by Meredith B. Givens and Ernestine Wilke.
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Includes bibliographies.
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Includes index.
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Wesley C. Mitchell, chairman.
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Advertisements on p. [1]-[10] at end.
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Hearings held July 23-August 16, 1962