Intergenerational Risk Sharing and Labour Supply in Collective Funded Pension Schemes with Defined Benefits

53 Pages Posted: 4 Aug 2010

See all articles by Jan Bonenkamp

Jan Bonenkamp

CPB Netherlands Bureau of Economic Policy Research

Ed Westerhout

CPB Netherlands Bureau of Economic Policy Analysis; Tilburg University - Tilburg University School of Economics and Management

Date Written: June 1, 2010

Abstract

In many countries, collective funded pension schemes with defined benefits (DB) are being replaced by individual schemes with defined contributions. Collective funded DB pensions may indeed reduce social welfare. This will be the case when the schemes feature income-related contributions that distort the labour-leisure decision. However, these schemes also share risks between generations. This adds to welfare if these risks cannot be traded on capital markets. This paper compares the welfare gains from intergenerational risk sharing with the welfare losses that are due to labour market distortions. We adopt a two-period overlapping-generations model for a small open economy with risky returns to equity holdings. We derive analytically that the gains dominate the losses for the case of Cobb-Douglas preferences between labour and leisure. Numerical simulations for the more general CES case confirm these findings which also withstand a number of other model modifications, like the introduction of a short-sale constraint for households and the inclusion of a labour income tax. These results suggest that collective funded schemes with well-organized risk sharing are preferable over individual schemes, even if labour market distortions are taken into account.

Keywords: risk sharing, labour market distortion, funded pensions, defined benefits

JEL Classification: E21, G11, H55

Suggested Citation

Bonenkamp, Jan and Westerhout, Ed, Intergenerational Risk Sharing and Labour Supply in Collective Funded Pension Schemes with Defined Benefits (June 1, 2010). Netspar Discussion Paper No. 06/2010-019, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1652694 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1652694

Jan Bonenkamp

CPB Netherlands Bureau of Economic Policy Research ( email )

P.O. Box 80510
2508 GM The Hague, 2585 JR
Netherlands

Ed Westerhout (Contact Author)

CPB Netherlands Bureau of Economic Policy Analysis ( email )

P.O. Box 80510
2508 GM The Hague, 2585 JR
Netherlands

Tilburg University - Tilburg University School of Economics and Management ( email )

PO Box 90153
Tilburg, 5000 LE Ti
Netherlands

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
73
Abstract Views
624
Rank
585,022
PlumX Metrics