This paper studies the redistribution and welfare effects of increasing the flexibility of individual pension take-up. We use an overlapping-generations model with Beveridgean pay-as-you-go pensions, where individuals differ in ability and life span. We find that introducing flexible pension take-up can induce a Pareto improvement when the initial pension scheme contains within-cohort redistribution and induces early retirement. Such a Pareto-improving reform entails the application of uniform actuarial adjustment of pension entitlements based on average life expectancy. Introducing actuarial non-neutrality that stimulates later retirement further improves such a flexibility reform
Essay 1 (with Juha Alho and Edward Palmer): All around the world, public pension schemes are moving...
We study the tradeoff between efficiency and redistribution in a model with overlapping generations,...
The reform of old age insurance is one of the pressing problems of Swiss Society. A key policy issue...
Abstract: This paper studies the redistribution and welfare effects of increasing the flexibility of...
As the heterogeneity in life expectancy by socioeconomic status increases, many pension systems impl...
One of the main conclusions of this thesis is that collective pension funds are potentially welfare ...
The present paper Studies the growth and efficiency consequences of pension funding with individual ...
This thesis deals with the optimal design of pensions systems in the face of demographic changes. Th...
Many countries around the world have large public pension programs with significant cross-cohort red...
We investigate the impact of a reduction in the pension replacement rate on the schooling choice and...
Abstract In a pension system with uniform policies for contribution and accrual, each participant ha...
Intergenerational risk sharing is often seen as a strong point of the Dutch pension system. The abil...
The present paper quantitatively characterizes the consequences of rising pension progressivity in a...
In a two-period model with agent heterogeneity we analyze a pension reform toward a stronger link be...
Though the present thesis is not intended as a monograph, its respective chapters are interrelated: ...
Essay 1 (with Juha Alho and Edward Palmer): All around the world, public pension schemes are moving...
We study the tradeoff between efficiency and redistribution in a model with overlapping generations,...
The reform of old age insurance is one of the pressing problems of Swiss Society. A key policy issue...
Abstract: This paper studies the redistribution and welfare effects of increasing the flexibility of...
As the heterogeneity in life expectancy by socioeconomic status increases, many pension systems impl...
One of the main conclusions of this thesis is that collective pension funds are potentially welfare ...
The present paper Studies the growth and efficiency consequences of pension funding with individual ...
This thesis deals with the optimal design of pensions systems in the face of demographic changes. Th...
Many countries around the world have large public pension programs with significant cross-cohort red...
We investigate the impact of a reduction in the pension replacement rate on the schooling choice and...
Abstract In a pension system with uniform policies for contribution and accrual, each participant ha...
Intergenerational risk sharing is often seen as a strong point of the Dutch pension system. The abil...
The present paper quantitatively characterizes the consequences of rising pension progressivity in a...
In a two-period model with agent heterogeneity we analyze a pension reform toward a stronger link be...
Though the present thesis is not intended as a monograph, its respective chapters are interrelated: ...
Essay 1 (with Juha Alho and Edward Palmer): All around the world, public pension schemes are moving...
We study the tradeoff between efficiency and redistribution in a model with overlapping generations,...
The reform of old age insurance is one of the pressing problems of Swiss Society. A key policy issue...