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    ISBN: 9783031624032
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (XXI, 265 p. 10 illus., 5 illus. in color.)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Milevsky, Moshe A. The Religious Roots of Longevity Risk Sharing
    Keywords: Finance. ; History. ; Economics ; Actuarial science. ; Social history. ; Longevity Risk ; Enlightenment ; Religious Thinking ; Protestants ; Trustees ; Modern Pensions ; Early Annuity Funds ; Annuities ; Adam Smith and Pensions ; History of pensions ; Pension Funds ; Pension Fund Management ; Scottish Enlightenment ; Ideas of pre-destination ; Finance and religion ; Presbyterian Church of Scotland ; Genesis annuity fund ; Actuarial History ; Early Actuarial Techniques
    Abstract: PART ONE: A BLESSED OLD AGE -- Chapter 1: DO YOU BELIEVE IN PENSIONS? -- Chapter 2: LONGEVITY RISK AND RELIGION -- Chapter 3: THE BENEFITS OF POOLING -- PART TWO: CHURCH & UNIVERSITY -- Chapter 4: AN ENLIGHTENED FINANCIAL INNOVATION -- Chapter 5: A PRESBYTERIAN SCHEME FOR MINISTERS -- Chapter 6: ALEXANDER WEBSTER AND THE ARCHIVES -- Chapter 7: ANNUITY MANAGEMENT IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY -- Chapter 8: FROM CHURCH PAYGO TO FULLY FUNDED -- Chapter 9: SCIENTIFIC MODELS VERSUS RELIGIOUS BELIEFS -- Chapter 10: THE FIRST BIBLICAL ANNUITY -- PART THREE: FROM RETIREMENT TO DECUMULATION -- Chapter 11: PENSION RESISTANCE IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY -- Chapter 12: LONGEVITY HETEROGENEITY IN THE 21ST CENTURY.
    Abstract: This book presents a unique historical study on the origins of longevity risk management and its links to religious institutions in the eighteenth century. Throughout history, monarchs, affluent patrons, and wealthy benefactors routinely pledged to provide their devotees with pensions or life annuities, mirroring the biblical concept of ‘daily bread for life’. Until the eighteenth century, however, the uncertainty around the longevity of beneficiaries’ lives and the difficulty of budgeting for random financial obligations had posed economic challenges that often led to insufficient funding and high default rates. This book narrates the genesis of longevity risk pooling and the first successfully funded annuity scheme in history, an eventual prototype for national pension plans around the world. It examines how a group of Protestant clergymen, scientists, and intellectuals associated with the Presbyterian Church of Scotland pioneered innovative methods for setting up a reversionary annuity and widow’s pension plan, guided by actuarial principles. Unknown to many, the economist Adam Smith, and other literati of the Scottish Enlightenment, invested in this novel annuity. Illuminating the social and theological contexts of this scheme, the book argues that religious belief played a critical role in the development of best practices around the prudent management of longevity risk. The practices, values and beliefs in divine probabilities were at the heart of these thought leaders’ confidence in long-term financial projections. Shedding light on this fascinating aspect of actuarial history by an examination of the archival records, while also linking to contextual discussions of modern pension challenges, this book will be of interest to scholars and readers interested in finance, insurance, pensions, and religion. Moshe A. Milevsky is a tenured professor at the Schulich School of Business, York University (in Toronto), and a Fellow (2002) of the Fields Institute for Research in Mathematical Sciences, with graduate degrees in Financial Economics, Mathematical Statistics, and History from the University of Edinburgh. He has published 17 books, over 65 peer-reviewed papers, and hundreds of newspaper pieces. .
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