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Longevity, Life-Cycle Behavior and Pension Reform

SOEPpapers 396, 39 S.

Peter Haan, Victoria Prowse

2011

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Published in: Journal of Econometrics 178 (2013) Part 3, 582-601

Abstract

How can public pension systems be reformed to ensure fiscal stability in the face of increasing life expectancy? To address this pressing open question in public finance, we estimate a life-cycle model in which the optimal employment, retirement and consumption decisions of forward-looking individuals depend, inter alia, on life expectancy and the design of the public pension system. We calculate that, in the case of Germany, the fiscal consequences of the 6.4 year increase in age 65 life expectancy anticipated to occur over the 40 years that separate the 1942 and 1982 birth cohorts can be offset by either an increase of 4.34 years in the full pensionable age or a cut of 37.7% in the per-year value of public pension benefits. Of these two distinct policy approaches to coping with the fiscal consequences of improving longevity, increasing the full pensionable age generates the largest responses in labor supply and retirement behavior.

Peter Haan

Head of Department in the Public Economics Department



JEL-Classification: D91;J11;J22;J26;J64
Keywords: Life expectancy, public pension reform, retirement, employment, life-cycle models, consumption, tax and transfer system
Frei zugängliche Version: (econstor)
http://hdl.handle.net/10419/150941

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