A Framework for Assessing the Costs of Pension Reform Reversals

A Framework for Assessing the Costs of Pension Reform Reversals
READ MORE...
Volume/Issue: Volume 2020 Issue 132
Publication date: July 2020
ISBN: 9781513550497
$18.00
Add to Cart by clicking price of the language and format you'd like to purchase
Available Languages and Formats
Paperback
English
Prices in red indicate formats that are not yet available but are forthcoming.
Topics covered in this book

This title contains information about the following subjects. Click on a subject if you would like to see other titles with the same subjects.

Labor , Public Finance , Demography , WP , benefit ratio , public debt-to-GDP ratio , old-age dependency ratio , contribution rate , labour force , public pension , reform reversals , population ageing , overlapping generations model , Ageing Report , adverse impact , Aging , Pension reform , Pension spending , Retirement , Europe

Summary

Several European countries are currently considering reversing parts of their pension reforms that were adopted previously to improve sustainability. In this paper we present a framework that allows us to quantify the macroeconomic and fiscal costs of such reversals. We thereby integrate the country-specific information from the latest Ageing Report into a dynamic general equilibrium model with overlapping generations. Focusing on Germany and Slovakia as country cases, our model replicates the Ageing Report’s pension expenditure projections very well. We calculate the macroeconomic impact of first the additional pension reforms needed to contain the public debt pressures arising from population ageing and second the costs of reform reversals. Our model results show that undoing past pension reforms would generate substantial adverse macroeconomic costs and could pose challenges for fiscal sustainability.