Abstract
This paper tries to explore some optimal funding policies for pension systems in a general equilibrium setting where funding affects returns on investment and wages through its impact on capital formation. This is done in the context of irregular demographic evolutions such as those expected in developed countries for the next century. Particular attention is given to the intergenerational welfare criterion which is used for designing optimal policies. It appears that funding receives low justification with a welfare criterion which assumes a high substitutability between consumptions of successive cohorts, implying a low concern for intergenerational equity. Funding is highly justified in the opposite case where a high level of consumption for some cohorts is not considered as a compensation for low consumption by others. However the optimal patterns of transfers and savings which are found in this latter case are not straightforward. Some simpler funding rules are explored in the last section of this paper, which show that non-optimal funding may imply, on the contrary, a high level of inequality between subsequent generations.
Paper presented at the ISPE-conference “Fiscal implications of an ageing population”, May-June 1990at Vaalsbroek, The Netherlands. We thank Pierre Pestieau for his remarks on a first draft of this paper. We also thank for their comments our two discussants Carol Propper and Lans Bovenberg, as well as other participants to the ISPE Conference. Any errors are, of course, ours.
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© 1992 Springer-Verlag Berlin · Heidelberg
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Blanchet, D., Kessler, D. (1992). Optimal pension funding with demographic instability and endogenous returns on investment. In: Bös, D., Cnossen, S. (eds) Fiscal Implications of an Aging Population. Population Economics. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-77250-4_3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-77250-4_3
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