Author : Björn Pannemann
Publisher :
ISBN 13 : 9783640896042
Total Pages : 88 pages
Book Rating : 4.8/5 (96 download)
Book Synopsis Challenges of the Demographic Change in Germany by : Björn Pannemann
Download or read book Challenges of the Demographic Change in Germany written by Björn Pannemann and published by . This book was released on 2011 with total page 88 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Seminar paper from the year 2010 in the subject Economics - Other, grade: 2,3, The FOM University of Applied Sciences, Hamburg (IOM - Institut fur Oekonomie & Management), course: Economics - Volkswirtschaftslehre, language: English, comment: Diese Hausarbeit wurde im ersten Semester im Rahmen des Masterstudiengangs "Master of Business Administration (MBA)" geschrieben., abstract: The demographic change in Germany is a current and always present subject. The media, politicians and experts permanently discuss the topic. There are many different opinions and views, but all have a statistical commonality; humans are invariably growing older and at the same time Germany is struck by an alarming decline in the birth rate. This dilemma leads to a fast aging population with big problems for the whole German society and especially for the efficiency of the German Pension Insurance. Since many years, the legal pension fund is stuck in a crisis. Declining birth rates and an increasing expectancy of life yield to less and less premium payers and a steadily increasing group of pension recipients, which, due to the PAYG system, confronts the Pension Fund with a financial problem. Hence, the benefit level will further decline in the long term and the legal pension will not be sufficient as the exclusive old-age insurance. This assignment considers the key aspects of the demographic development, esp. the future perspective of the pension system. Furthermore, this assignment will discuss possible solutions in order to find out a possible strategy to solve this problem. The aspects are only related to Germany, even though Germany doesn't stand alone with the phenomenon of demographic aging. Similar developments can be found in almost every European and western industrial nation.