Knowledge Overview 2020
As a knowledge network, Netspar is looking for answers to many questions about financing the old age. In addition to academic research, we develop knowledge that is directly relevant and applicable to practice. We do this in collaboration with our partners; experts from the government and the pension and insurance industry. We make the results accessible to a wide audience. In this annual overview, you will see what practice-oriented research we achieved in 2020.
HIGHLIGHTED
Using social norms to activate pension plan members: insights from practice
Joyce Augustus-Vonken e.a.
One pager
HIGHLIGHTED
Total overview of industry oriented output in 2020
- Financial Consequences of Widowhood, Jeroen van der Vaart, Raun van Ooijen, Rob Alessie
- Raising pension awareness through letters and social media, Marike Knoef, Jim Been, Marijke van Putten
- Supporting pension participants: Three lessons learned from the medical domain for better pension decisions, Bregje Holleman, Hans Hoeken en Jelle Strikwerda
- Using eye-tracking to understand individual decision-making, Zihao Liu en Peter de Goeij
- Improving older workers’ employability until their retirement age, Peter Lapperre, Ad van Zonneveld, Benedict Dellaert, Henk Heek, Marieke Koeman, Pascal Corten, Robert Boulogne
- Infographics and Financial Decisions, Peter de Goeij, Ruben Cox
- Emotions and technology in pension service interactions, Wiebke Eberhardt, Alexander Henkel, Chantal Hoet
- Shades of labor: Motives of older adults to participate in productive activities, Sonja Wendel, Benedict Dellaert
- Ageing and absenteeism: impact on the insurance preferences of employers, Remco Mallee, Raymond Montizaan
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How will disabled workers respond to a higher retirement age?, Arthur van Soest, Jim Been and Tunga Kantarci - Using big data to develop best senior living concepts, Ioulia Ossokina, Theo Arentze
- Do financial incentives stimulate partially disabled persons to return to work?, Tunga Kantarci, Jan Maarten van Sonsbeek
- To what extent can partial retirement ensure retirement income adequacy?, Tunga Kantarci, Jochem Zweerink
- Public Money for Private Elderly Care, Arjen Hussem, Marianne Tenand, Pieter Bakx
- Better Coinsurance Risk Sharing in Nursing Home Care, Bram Wouterse, Arjen Hussem, Rob Aalbers
- Home care use after the Dutch long-term care reform in 2015, Pieter Bakx, Eddy van Doorslaer, Pilar García-Gómez, Sara Rellstab
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Risk Sharing within Pension Schemes, Antoon Pelsser, Anne Balter and Frank de Jong -
Investing for Retirement with an Explicit Benchmark, Agnes Joseph, Anne Balter, Antoon Pelsser, Frank de Jong, Lennard Beijering, Pascal Janssen and Thijs Kamma -
Low interest rates and the future of pensions, Casper van Ewijk, Lex Meijdam, Peter Zwaneveld and Rutger Teulings - Low interest rates and the balance between pay-as-you-go financing and funded pensions, Casper van Ewijk, Lex Meijdam
- Pension choices: implications of a heterogenous participant population on the pay-out stream, Servaas van Bilsen, Eduard Ponds, Johan Bonekamp
- Investment risk with guarantees after retirement?, Peter Schotman, Mark Irwin, Peter Dekkers, Roderick Molenaar
- Genetic health risks, insurance, and retirement, Richard Karlsson Linnér, Philipp Koellinger
- Part-time pension: interest and obstacles on the work floor, Kène Henkens, Hanna van Solinge, Harry van Dalen
- Low interest rates and the balance between pay-as-you-go financing and funded pensions, Casper van Ewijk, Lex Meijdam
- The support for a physically demanding job analyzed, Kène Henkens, Harry van Dalen, Jaap Oude Mulders
- Differences in retirement preferences between the selfemployed and employees: Do job characteristics play an explanatory role?, Marleen Damman, Dieuwke Zwier, Swenne G. van den Heuvel
- Pension Agreement Tax Framework, Bastiaan Starink, Michael Visser
- Pensions after the mandatory industry wide schemes, Fieke van der Lecq, Erik Lutjens
- Netspar Brief 19: Interest-Rate Risk, the Life Cycle, and the Pension Agreement, Roel Mehlkopf, Servaas van Bilsen