12 employees and their employers and settled benefits for the retirees. If there is a short term gap the government directly or indirectly has to fill it fl there—is—»e-other-' j way? In the long run any disequilibrium has to be dealt with by changing contributions or benefits. Thus the pensions are financed by a shift of income from one part of the population to the other and time does not enter in any relevant sense. The old peoples bread is not accumulated for them over a life time, it is delivered to them fresh from the baker. There is no capital and no interest. (Since the Social Security Law 1983 which changed from pay as you go to £ m/Is—• accumulation this is not true any more and there is a yearly excess of security taxes over benefits, in 1989 $ 52 billion). Why has it been necessary to supplement this system by another one with 2.6 trillion dollar financial assets ( one and a half for the private pension funds alone ) which has had a profound influence on the whole economy? While the accumulation has been going on, in the build-up period, . . . there had to be a corresponding amount of saving which has meant a *- The effect of this has been described in my earlier paper on household saving (1982). It depressed the national product and in this way produced the budget deficits which indirectly were financed by the pension funds. This effect was particularly undesirable in the seventies, when the growth rate had slowed down. A second effect occurred in the financial sphere. The funds gained an enormous importance there. Since they moved great amount^ of 1U. <ypt44, assets they frequently engaged in block trading off the floor of the stock exchange. They also contributed very much to the introduction of options and index trading.^“he managers of the 'jJtL funds gained a great influence also on the take-overs. The funds O'M, iCOCCV , j C t W j-u/ 0