TY - JOUR
T1 - Pension Reform and Wealth Inequality
T2 - Theory and Evidence
AU - Andersen, Torben M.
AU - Bhattacharya, Joydeep
AU - Grodecka-Messi, Anna
AU - Mann, Katja
PY - 2024/6
Y1 - 2024/6
N2 - A growing literature explores reasons for rising wealth inequality, but is mostly silent on the role of pension systems despite their well-understood influence on life-cycle savings. This paper develops a simple life-cycle model to lay bare the primary theoretical mechanisms connecting pension systems, asset accumulation, and the wealth distribution. Mandated fully-funded plans transform individuals with lower incomes, often characterized as low savers, into asset owners, and may also imply a more equal wealth distribution than pay-as-you-go-based systems. To test the empirical validity of these predictions, the paper explores a pension reform in Denmark, a country that witnessed declining wealth inequality over the last decades. In a calibrated life-cycle model employing unique register data, the Danish pension reform emerges as a key factor explaining the downward trend in wealth inequality.
AB - A growing literature explores reasons for rising wealth inequality, but is mostly silent on the role of pension systems despite their well-understood influence on life-cycle savings. This paper develops a simple life-cycle model to lay bare the primary theoretical mechanisms connecting pension systems, asset accumulation, and the wealth distribution. Mandated fully-funded plans transform individuals with lower incomes, often characterized as low savers, into asset owners, and may also imply a more equal wealth distribution than pay-as-you-go-based systems. To test the empirical validity of these predictions, the paper explores a pension reform in Denmark, a country that witnessed declining wealth inequality over the last decades. In a calibrated life-cycle model employing unique register data, the Danish pension reform emerges as a key factor explaining the downward trend in wealth inequality.
KW - Wealth inequality
KW - Pension systems
KW - Crowding out
KW - Life-cycle savings
KW - Wealth inequality
KW - Pension systems
KW - Crowding out
KW - Life-cycle savings
U2 - 10.1016/j.euroecorev.2024.104746
DO - 10.1016/j.euroecorev.2024.104746
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0014-2921
VL - 165
JO - European Economic Review
JF - European Economic Review
M1 - 104746
ER -