Are Public and Private Social Expenditures Complementary?
Most analyses of social protection are focussed on public arrangements. However, social effort is not restricted to the public domain; all kinds of private arrangements can be substitutes to public programs. OECD data indicate that accounting for private social benefits has an equalising effect on levels of social effort across a number of countries. This suggests complementarity between public and private social expenditures. But their distributional effects differ. Using cross-country data, we find a negative relationship between net public social expenditures and income inequality, but a positive relationship between net private social expenditures and income inequality. We conclude that changes in the public/private mix in the provision of social protection may affect the redistributive impact of the welfare state. Copyright International Atlantic Economic Society 2005
Year of publication: |
2005
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Authors: | Caminada, Koen ; Goudswaard, Kees |
Published in: |
International Advances in Economic Research. - International Atlantic Economic Society - IAES. - Vol. 11.2005, 2, p. 175-189
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Publisher: |
International Atlantic Economic Society - IAES |
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