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Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

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Page 1: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Econ 208

Marek KapickaLecture 8

Social Security

Page 2: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Roadmap

Government Expenditures A) Data on Govt Expenditures B) Changes in Gov’t Spending in a

frictionless world C) Changes in Gov’t Spending in a

world with frictions D) Social Security

Page 3: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

PAYG Young pay SS taxes t Old receive benefits b Balanced budged each period

PAYG introduced in period T

n

bt

NbtN

1

Page 4: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

PAYG for Consumers Who Are Old in Period T

Page 5: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

PAYG for Consumers Born in Period T and Later

Page 6: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

PAYG for Consumers Born in Period T and Later

Change in wealth depends on r and n

Better off if n>r Worse off if n<r

)1)(1(1

11

rn

rnb

r

yy

r

by

n

bywe

Page 7: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Fully Funded Social Security

Essentially a mandated savings program where assets are acquired by the young, with these assets sold in retirement.

Either ineffective or decreases welfare

Page 8: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Fully Funded Social Security When Mandated Retirement Saving Is Binding

Page 9: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

What’s missing in the model?Costs of Fully funded social security

Transition costs It is costly to move from PAYG to FF

Commitment Problems Government cannot commit not to pay to

those who haven’t saved. It may be optimal to have PAYG even if .

Moral Hazard Government cannot commit to help

out those who made risky investments and became unlucky

Page 10: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

What’s missing in the model?Costs of PAYG: Fertility declines

Social security tax rate Tau and total Fertility Rate TFR. Source: Boldrin, De Nardi, Jones 2005, “Fertility and Social Security”

Page 11: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

What’s missing in the model?Costs of PAYG

Distortions of savings Distortions of labor supply (If

distortionary SS taxes) hours work in any given year years worked (choice of retirement

age)

Page 12: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

US Social Security

Page 13: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Social Security in the World

Page 14: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

US Social Security

Page 15: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Where are we?

1. Introduction: A model with no Government

2. Government Policies1. The Effects of Government Spending2. Government Taxation and Government

Debt

Page 16: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

What To Read

Read Today:

DLS, Chapter 13.2,13.4 The Region, Minneapolis Fed: “European

Vacation”, on the web Next time:

The Washington Post:"Where does the Laffer curve bend? "

Page 17: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Today

Government Taxation 1) The data 2) The effects on Labor Supply 3) The effects on Government

Revenue 4) The effects on GDP

Page 18: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Data on US TaxationFederal Government Revenue

Page 19: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Data on US TaxationAverage Marginal Income Taxes

Page 20: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Taxation

Lump-Sum tax vs. Distortive tax Lump sum tax does not depend on

the actions of the consumer With distortive taxation, the

welfare theorems fail Competitive equilibrium is not Pareto

optimal

Page 21: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Why Distortive Taxation? In reality, lump-sum tax is infeasible

Lump sum means everyone pays the same amount but some people have no wealth

If differences among people are taken into account then a distorting tax is the only possibility

What are the effects of a flat tax on Labor Supply? Government Revenue? GDP? Capital Accumulation?

Page 22: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Where we are

Government Taxation 1) The data 2) The effects on Labor Supply 3) The effects on Government

Revenue 4) The effects on GDP

Page 23: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

2) The Effects on Labor SupplyAn Example

Utility of a household

Household problem:

1),(

1LCLCU

wLtCts

LC

)1( ..

1max

1

Page 24: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

2) The Effects on Labor Supply

Solution:

Labor Supply decreases in the tax rate

1)1(max

1LwLt

L

1

])1[( wtL

Page 25: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

The model and the data E. Prescott (2004). “Why Do Americans Work So Much More Than Europeans?

Page 26: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

U.S. vs. France

1990’s: French productivity higher, but labor

supply much lower GDP per person lower in France than

in the USA 1970’s:

French productivity lower, but labor supply slightly higher

Page 27: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Ohanian, Raffo, Rogerson: A more comprehensive study

Compare all the OECD countries for 1956-2004 period

How much can we explain by taxes?

Look for alternative explanations as well.

Conclusion: Taxes are the most important factor behind changes in labor supply

Page 28: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Ohanian, Raffo, Rogerson: The data

Page 29: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Ohanian, Raffo, Rogerson: The Results

Page 30: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Ohanian, Raffo, Rogerson: Other Factors

Compute a labor supply wedge:

Our model predicts that the wedge is equal to the tax rate. What if other factors, outside of the model, affect it as well?

Look at measure of employment protection, union density, unemployment benefit replacement rate, duration benefits

Δ𝑡=1 −𝑀𝑅𝑆𝑙 ,𝑐

𝑀 𝑃𝑁

Page 31: Econ 208 Marek Kapicka Lecture 8 Social Security

Ohanian, Raffo, Rogerson: Other Factors