Welfare Effects of Social Security Reforms Across Europe : the Case of France and Italy
This paper uses a calibrated life cycle model to quantify the distributional effects of Social Security reforms. We focus only on two countries: Italy and France because they adopted two different strategies to cope with aging. While France marginally modified its defined pension plan, Italy switched from a defined pension plan to a contributive system. We find both reforms redistributes welfare unevenly: high skilled workers are the primary winners of the French reform and self employed individuals, especially unskilled workers, are the losers under the new Italian Social Security arrangement.
Year of publication: |
2005-04-01
|
---|---|
Authors: | Fonseca, Raquel ; Sopraseuth, Thepthida |
Institutions: | Centro Studi di Economia e Finanza (CSEF) |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Do Market Regulation and Financial Imperfections Affect Firm Size? New Empirical Evidence
Fonseca, Raquel, (2004)
-
Spanish Unemployment Persistence and the Ladder Effect
Collard, Fabrice, (2003)
-
On the Interaction between Unemployment and Inter-regional Mobility
Fonseca, Raquel, (2003)
- More ...