Welfare stigma and risk taking in the welfare state
<Para ID="Par1">The welfare state provides social insurance for lifetime risks. In that framework welfare stigma in form of a social norm against living off (net-)transfers is introduced, and the impact of welfare stigma on self-insurance and social insurance that works through redistributive taxation is analyzed. It turns out that introducing welfare stigma reduces the socially optimal self-insurance and raises the socially optimal social insurance. It may be efficient for the society to operate at a point on its opportunity frontier where an increase in risk taking decreases mean post-tax income and welfare stigma. In the presence of moral hazard self-insurance efforts are invariant with respect to welfare stigma whereas social insurance increases upon introducing welfare stigma. Furthermore, it is shown that self-insurance and social insurance are inefficiently low or high depending on the preference intensity of the social norm.[Figure not available: see fulltext.] Copyright Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2015
Year of publication: |
2015
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Authors: | Eichner, Thomas ; Weinreich, Daniel |
Published in: |
Social Choice and Welfare. - Springer. - Vol. 44.2015, 2, p. 319-348
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Publisher: |
Springer |
Saved in:
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