Justice Across Generations: What Does it Mean?Lee M. Cohen, Public Policy Institute (American Association of Retired Persons) Public Policy Institute, American Association of Retired Persons, 1993 - Distributive justice - 324 pages |
Contents
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 5 | 5 |
The View of Rabbinic Literature Harlan J Wechsler | 19 |
Do DepressionEra Patterns Presage | 35 |
Copyright | |
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AARP Achenbaum age groups age-based age-group allocation American argued argument behavior benefits Bengtson and Murray birth cohorts capital changes choices claims complete lives concern conflict consumption context cross-culturally cultural Daniels debate decades demographic discussion distribution distributive justice egalitarianism elderly elders equality ethics example filial future genera Gerontology growth honor important income increase individuals inequality institutions intergenerational equity intergenerational ethics intergenerational justice interpersonal investment issues Japan Japanese Jerusalem Talmud Kiddushin Kotlikoff labor life-course lifetime lineage McKerlie measure Medicare ment moral norms obligations old age older parents percent person perspective Peter Laslett political population present value principle problem programs prudential lifespan account public policy Rabbi relations retirement role saving share sixty-five social contract Social Security stages structure suggests Talmud taxes tion tional Tosefta transfers Tyler Cowen U.S. Bureau U.S. Congress United welfare well-being workers young younger youth