Conditioning public pensions on health: effects on capital accumulation and welfare

IF 6.1 2区 经济学 Journal of Population Economics Pub Date : 2024-04-20 DOI:10.1007/s00148-024-01020-z
Giorgio Fabbri, Marie-Louise Leroux, Paolo Melindi-Ghidi, Willem Sas
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Abstract

This paper develops an overlapping generations model that links a public health system to a pay-as-you-go (PAYG) pension system. It relies on two assumptions. First, the health system directly finances curative health spending on the elderly. Second, public pensions partially depend on health status by introducing a component indexed to society’s average level of old-age disability. Reducing the average disability rate in the economy then lowers pension benefits as the need to finance long-term care services also drops. We study the effects of introducing such a ‘comprehensive’ Social Security system on individual decisions, capital accumulation, and welfare. We first show that health investments can boost savings and capital accumulation under certain conditions. Second, if individuals are sufficiently concerned with their health when old, it is optimal to introduce a health-dependent pension system, as this will raise social welfare compared to a system where pensions are not tied to the society’s average level of old-age disability. Our analysis thus highlights an important policy recommendation: making PAYG pension schemes partially health-dependent can be beneficial to society.

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将公共养老金与健康挂钩:对资本积累和福利的影响
本文建立了一个世代重叠模型,将公共卫生体系与现收现付(PAYG)养老金体系联系起来。该模型基于两个假设。首先,医疗系统直接为老年人的治疗性医疗支出提供资金。其次,公共养老金部分取决于健康状况,引入了与社会平均老年残疾水平挂钩的部分。降低经济中的平均失能率就会降低养老金福利,因为为长期护理服务提供资金的需求也会下降。我们研究了引入这种 "综合 "社会保障体系对个人决策、资本积累和福利的影响。我们首先证明,在某些条件下,健康投资可以促进储蓄和资本积累。其次,如果个人对年老时的健康状况有足够的关注,那么引入依赖健康的养老金制度是最佳选择,因为与养老金不与社会平均老年残疾水平挂钩的制度相比,这将提高社会福利。因此,我们的分析强调了一个重要的政策建议:使 PAYG 养老金计划部分依赖于健康对社会有益。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.60
自引率
6.60%
发文量
50
期刊介绍: The Journal of Population Economics is an international quarterly that publishes original theoretical and applied research in all areas of population economics. Micro-level topics examine individual, household or family behavior, including household formation, marriage, divorce, fertility choices, education, labor supply, migration, health, risky behavior and aging. Macro-level investigations may address such issues as economic growth with exogenous or endogenous population evolution, population policy, savings and pensions, social security, housing, and health care. The journal also features research into economic approaches to human biology, the relationship between population dynamics and public choice, and the impact of population on the distribution of income and wealth. Lastly, readers will find papers dealing with policy issues and development problems that are relevant to population issues.The journal is published in collaboration with POP at UNU-MERIT, the Global Labor Organization (GLO) and the European Society for Population Economics (ESPE).Officially cited as: J Popul Econ Factor (RePEc): 13.576 (July 2018) Rank 69 of 2102 journals listed in RePEc
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