Social Security Design and its Political Support

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

Social Security Design and its Political Support. / Berg, Rasmus Kehlet Skjødt; Gonzalez-Eiras, Martin.

2023.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Berg, RKS & Gonzalez-Eiras, M 2023 'Social Security Design and its Political Support'.

APA

Berg, R. K. S., & Gonzalez-Eiras, M. (2023). Social Security Design and its Political Support.

Vancouver

Berg RKS, Gonzalez-Eiras M. Social Security Design and its Political Support. 2023.

Author

Berg, Rasmus Kehlet Skjødt ; Gonzalez-Eiras, Martin. / Social Security Design and its Political Support. 2023.

Bibtex

@techreport{2b05f3d2e82d4634a93c75e78a5e705e,
title = "Social Security Design and its Political Support",
abstract = "The design of social security systems has implications not only for households' saving and labor supply choices, but also for the political support of intergenerational transfers. We examine the effects of making pension benets dependent on - or independent of - labor market participation, as well as the level of redistribution, on the social security tax rate, labor supply, and capital accumulation. We conduct two numerical evaluations of the model's performance. First, it can explain almost two thirds of the observed increase in pension spending following Argentina's 2005-2010 reforms aimed at universalizing coverage. Second, the model predicts that a persistent shift in work preferences following the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. would result in a 1.8 p.p. increase in the social security tax rate.",
author = "Berg, {Rasmus Kehlet Skj{\o}dt} and Martin Gonzalez-Eiras",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
type = "WorkingPaper",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Social Security Design and its Political Support

AU - Berg, Rasmus Kehlet Skjødt

AU - Gonzalez-Eiras, Martin

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - The design of social security systems has implications not only for households' saving and labor supply choices, but also for the political support of intergenerational transfers. We examine the effects of making pension benets dependent on - or independent of - labor market participation, as well as the level of redistribution, on the social security tax rate, labor supply, and capital accumulation. We conduct two numerical evaluations of the model's performance. First, it can explain almost two thirds of the observed increase in pension spending following Argentina's 2005-2010 reforms aimed at universalizing coverage. Second, the model predicts that a persistent shift in work preferences following the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. would result in a 1.8 p.p. increase in the social security tax rate.

AB - The design of social security systems has implications not only for households' saving and labor supply choices, but also for the political support of intergenerational transfers. We examine the effects of making pension benets dependent on - or independent of - labor market participation, as well as the level of redistribution, on the social security tax rate, labor supply, and capital accumulation. We conduct two numerical evaluations of the model's performance. First, it can explain almost two thirds of the observed increase in pension spending following Argentina's 2005-2010 reforms aimed at universalizing coverage. Second, the model predicts that a persistent shift in work preferences following the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. would result in a 1.8 p.p. increase in the social security tax rate.

M3 - Working paper

BT - Social Security Design and its Political Support

ER -

ID: 359856471