Germany has one of the most generous public pension and health insurance systems of the world, yet private savings are high until old age. Savings remain positive in old age, even for most low income households. How can we explain what we might want to term the "German savings puzzle"? We provide a complicated answer that combines historical facts with capital market imperfections, housing, tax and pension policies. The first part of the paper describes how German households save, based on a synthetic panel of four cross sections of the German Income and Expenditure Survey ("Einkommens- und Verbrauchsstichproben") collected between 1978 and 1993. The second part links saving behavior with public policy, notably tax and pension policy
This paper presents selected highlights drawn from the German SAVE surveys in 2001 and 2003, expandi...
In response to population aging, pay-as-you-go pensions are being reduced in almost all developed co...
Many motives for saving a portion of one’s income co-exist and their relative importance changes ove...
Germany has one of the most generous public pension and health insurance systems of the world, yet p...
This paper describes how German households save and how their saving behavior is linked to public po...
This paper describes how German households save, and how their saving behavior is linked to public p...
The purpose of this dissertation is to contribute to the understanding of households' saving behavio...
'Household saving is still little understood, and even the basic facts for instance: How does saving...
The demographic change forced Germany and other industrialized countries to bring their pension syst...
Pension reforms in many developed countries make individuals shoulder a bigger share of lo...
The process of demographic change and the fact that the benefits of a growing proportion of pensione...
The first chapter investigates life-cycle saving behavior with a focus on the elderly, who are frequ...
Many motives for saving a portion of one’s income co-exist and their relative importance changes ove...
This paper presents selected highlights drawn from the German SAVE surveys in 2001 and 2003, expandi...
This special issue of Research in Economics is devoted to a further step in this direction. It prese...
This paper presents selected highlights drawn from the German SAVE surveys in 2001 and 2003, expandi...
In response to population aging, pay-as-you-go pensions are being reduced in almost all developed co...
Many motives for saving a portion of one’s income co-exist and their relative importance changes ove...
Germany has one of the most generous public pension and health insurance systems of the world, yet p...
This paper describes how German households save and how their saving behavior is linked to public po...
This paper describes how German households save, and how their saving behavior is linked to public p...
The purpose of this dissertation is to contribute to the understanding of households' saving behavio...
'Household saving is still little understood, and even the basic facts for instance: How does saving...
The demographic change forced Germany and other industrialized countries to bring their pension syst...
Pension reforms in many developed countries make individuals shoulder a bigger share of lo...
The process of demographic change and the fact that the benefits of a growing proportion of pensione...
The first chapter investigates life-cycle saving behavior with a focus on the elderly, who are frequ...
Many motives for saving a portion of one’s income co-exist and their relative importance changes ove...
This paper presents selected highlights drawn from the German SAVE surveys in 2001 and 2003, expandi...
This special issue of Research in Economics is devoted to a further step in this direction. It prese...
This paper presents selected highlights drawn from the German SAVE surveys in 2001 and 2003, expandi...
In response to population aging, pay-as-you-go pensions are being reduced in almost all developed co...
Many motives for saving a portion of one’s income co-exist and their relative importance changes ove...