000 01626nam a22001577a 4500
999 _c514864
_d514864
008 201225b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aKuhner, Stefan. and Chou, Kee-Lee
_921887
245 _aThe politics of MPF reform: Lessons from public attitudes in Hong Kong
260 _aSocial Policy and Society
300 _a9(3), Jul, 2020: p.414-430
520 _aThis article examines public attitudes towards two reform options for the defined-contribution (DC) Mandatory Provident Fund (MPF) scheme in Hong Kong: (i) increasing MPF contributions; or (ii) introducing a universal pension partly funded by switching MPF contributions to the universal pension. Drawing on a phone survey conducted with 975 active contributors to the MPF, we examine whether agreement with these MPF reform options can be explained by respondents’ self-interest, attachment to different welfare ideologies, their level of confusion with the MPF, uncertainty about future MPF income, and trust in the Hong Kong government to deal with MPF issues. This research identifies that it is uncertainty with future MPF income and low trust in the Hong Kong government to deal with MPF issues that have the most significant effect on respondents’ MPF reform preferences. Mainstream accounts of the effect of liberalist, universalist, conservative, and familistic welfare ideologies are only partially confirmed. - Reproduced
650 _aPrnsion reform, Defined-contriution pensions, Mandatory provident fund, Public attitudies, Hong Kong
_919847
773 _aSocial Policy and Society
906 _aPENSION REFORMS - HONGKONG
942 _cAR