Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-lj6df Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T14:56:38.389Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Intergenerational risk-sharing through funded pensions and public debt*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 December 2014

DAMIAAN H. J. CHEN
Affiliation:
University of Amsterdam, MN and Tinbergen Institute†
ROEL M. W. J. BEETSMA
Affiliation:
MN Chair in Pension Economics, University of Amsterdam CEPR, CESifo, Netspar and Tinbergen Institute
EDUARD H. M. PONDS
Affiliation:
Tilburg University, APG and Netspar
WARD E. ROMP
Affiliation:
University of Amsterdam, Tinbergen Institute and Netspar (e-mail: w.e.romp@uva.nl)

Abstract

We explore the benefits of intergenerational risk-sharing through both private funded pensions and via the public debt. We use a multi-period overlapping generation model with a pay-as-you-go pension pillar, a funded pension pillar and a government. Shocks are smoothed via the public debt and variations in the indexation of pension entitlements and pension contributions. The intensity of these adjustments increases when the pension funding ratio or public debt gets closer to their boundaries. The best-performing pension arrangement is a hybrid funded scheme in which both contributions and entitlement indexation are simultaneously deployed as stabilisation instruments. We find that contribution and indexation adjustment policies are substitutes and the same is the case for contribution and tax adjustment policies. By contrast, indexation and tax adjustment policies are complements. We compare different taxation regimes and conclude that a regime in which pension benefits are taxed, while contributions are paid before taxes, is preferred to a regime in which contributions are paid after taxes, but benefits are untaxed.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

We thank two anonymous referees, Ed Westerhout and Nick Draper for helpful comments on earlier versions of this paper.

References

Ball, L. and Mankiw, N. G. (2007) Intergenerational risk sharing in the spirit of Arrow, Debreu and Rawls, with applications to social security design. Journal of Political Economy, 115(4): 523547.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beetsma, R. and Bovenberg, A. (2009) Pensions and intergenerational risk-sharing in general equilibrium. Economica, 76: 364386.Google Scholar
Beetsma, R. and Bucciol, A. (forthcoming) Risk reallocation in defined-contribution funded pension systems. Macroeconomic Dynamics, accepted (doi:10.1017/S1365100513000205).Google Scholar
Beetsma, R. and Romp, W. (2013) Participation constraints in pension systems. Netspar Discussion Paper, 09/2013-030.Google Scholar
Beetsma, R., Lekniute, Z. and Ponds, E. (2011) De gevolgen van het pensioenakkoord voor de staatsschuld. ESB, 96, No. 4625S, pp. 4753.Google Scholar
Beetsma, R., Romp, W. and Vos, S. (2012) Voluntary participation and intergenerational risk sharing in a funded pension system. European Economic Review, 56: 13101324.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bohn, H. (1999) Should the social security trust fund hold equities? An intergenerational welfare analysis. Review of Economic Dynamics, 2: 666697.Google Scholar
Borsch-Supan, A., Ludwig, A. and Winter, J. (2006) Ageing, pension reform and capital-flows: a multi-country simulation model. Economica, 73: 625658.Google Scholar
Bovenberg, A. and Mehlkopf, R. (2013) Optimal design and regulation of funded pension schemes. Netspar Discussion Paper, 08/2013-026.Google Scholar
Chen, D. and Beetsma, R. (2013) Mandatory participation in occupational pension schemes in the Netherlands and other countries. Netspar Discussion Paper.Google Scholar
Cui, J., De Jong, F. and Ponds, E. (2011) Intergenerational risk sharing within funded pension schemes. Journal of Pension Economics and Finance, 10(1): 129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dimson, E., Marsh, P. and Staunton, M. (2011) “Equity Premiums Around the World” In: Rethinking the Equity Risk Premium. Edited by Hammond, P. B., Leibowitz, M. L., and Siegel, L. B.. Charlottesville, Virginia: The Research Foundation of CFA Institute, pp. 32–52.Google Scholar
Draper, N., Westerhout, E. and Nibbelink, A. (2011) Defined benefit pension schemes: a welfare analysis of risk sharing and labour market distortions. CPB Discussion Paper, 177.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feldstein, M. and Ranguelova, E. (1998) Individual risk and intergenerational risk sharing in an investment-based social security program. NBER Working Papers, 6839.Google Scholar
Feldstein, M. and Ranguelova, E. (2001) Individual risk in an investment-based social security system. American Economic Review, 91(4): 11161125.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gollier, C. (2008) Intergenerational risk-sharing and risk-taking of a pension fund. Journal of Public Economics, 92: 14631485.Google Scholar
Gordon, R. and Varian, H. (1988) Intergenerational risk sharing. Journal of Public Economics, 37: 185202.Google Scholar
Huang, J. (2008) Taxable and tax-deferred investing: a tax-arbitrage approach. Review of Financial Studies, 21(5): 21742207.Google Scholar
Lucas, R.E. and Stokey, N.L. (1983) Optimal Fiscal and Monetary Policy in an Economy without Capital. Journal of Monetary Economics, 12(1): 5593.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Matsen, E. and Thøgersen, Ø. (2004) Designing social security – a portfolio choice approach. European Economic Review, 48(4): 883904.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Penalva, J. and Van Bommel, J. (2011) The governance of perpetual financial intermediaries. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1787986Google Scholar
Romaniuk, K. (2013) Pension fund taxation and risk-taking: should we switch from the EET to the TEE regime? Annals of Finance, 9(4): 573588.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schonewille, P. (2007) Pan-European pension moves a step nearer. Investment and Pensions Europe.Google Scholar
Shiller, R. (1999) Social security and institutions for intergenerational, intragenerational and international risk-sharing. Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy, 50: 165204.Google Scholar
Smetters, K. (2006) Risk sharing across generations without publicly owned equities. Journal of Monetary Economics, 53: 14931508.Google Scholar
Teulings, C. and De Vries, C. (2006) Generational accounting, solidarity and pension losses. De Economist, 154(1): 6383.Google Scholar
Whitehouse, E. (1999) The tax treatment of funded pensions. MPRA Paper, no. 14173.Google Scholar