International audienceWe study the tradeoff between efficiency and redistribution in a model with overlapping generations, extensive labor supply, and perfect financial markets. The government instruments are a pension scheme and a age-independent nonlinear income tax schedule. At the second-best optimum, the pension system constrains the agents’ labor supply behavior, forcing them to work to achieve a required lifetime performance. Income taxes affect labor supply directly, but also indirectly through pension incentives. The indirect effect of taxes counteracts the usual forces in the efficiency-redistribution tradeoff: through the interplay with the pension system, decreasing taxes induces redistribution and reduces productive efficiency
ED EPSIn this paper we study the macroeconomic impact of a policy which changes the redistributive p...
Abstract: In this paper we examine various aspects of the optimal lifetime redistribution policy wit...
We study the redistributive properties of Pay-As-You-Go pension systems. Firstly, we show that the i...
International audienceWe study the tradeoff between efficiency and redistribution in a model with ov...
We study the tradeoff between efficiency and redistribution in a model with overlapping generations,...
Alternative structures of public pension programs have distinct implications for the trade-offs that...
This article aims at understanding the interplay between pension schemes and tax instruments. The mo...
This paper illustrates that the equity–efficiency trade-off between a redistributive, Beveridgean, p...
Many countries around the world have large public pension programs. Traditionally, these programs ha...
In models with exogenous labor supply, a reallocation of funds from a wage-related pension to a basi...
We study optimal redistribution in life-cycle economy with privately observed permanent permanent ea...
While the participation decision is discrete in a static context, i.e. to work or not to work, such ...
This paper investigates how parametric reform in a pay-as-you-go pension system with a tax-benefit l...
We study optimal lifetime redistributive policy in a two-period model where individuals differ in bo...
This paper explores the effects of pension illiteracy on aggregate labor supply and the redistributi...
ED EPSIn this paper we study the macroeconomic impact of a policy which changes the redistributive p...
Abstract: In this paper we examine various aspects of the optimal lifetime redistribution policy wit...
We study the redistributive properties of Pay-As-You-Go pension systems. Firstly, we show that the i...
International audienceWe study the tradeoff between efficiency and redistribution in a model with ov...
We study the tradeoff between efficiency and redistribution in a model with overlapping generations,...
Alternative structures of public pension programs have distinct implications for the trade-offs that...
This article aims at understanding the interplay between pension schemes and tax instruments. The mo...
This paper illustrates that the equity–efficiency trade-off between a redistributive, Beveridgean, p...
Many countries around the world have large public pension programs. Traditionally, these programs ha...
In models with exogenous labor supply, a reallocation of funds from a wage-related pension to a basi...
We study optimal redistribution in life-cycle economy with privately observed permanent permanent ea...
While the participation decision is discrete in a static context, i.e. to work or not to work, such ...
This paper investigates how parametric reform in a pay-as-you-go pension system with a tax-benefit l...
We study optimal lifetime redistributive policy in a two-period model where individuals differ in bo...
This paper explores the effects of pension illiteracy on aggregate labor supply and the redistributi...
ED EPSIn this paper we study the macroeconomic impact of a policy which changes the redistributive p...
Abstract: In this paper we examine various aspects of the optimal lifetime redistribution policy wit...
We study the redistributive properties of Pay-As-You-Go pension systems. Firstly, we show that the i...