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This paper quantifies the welfare implications of the U.S. Social Security program during the Great Recession. We find that the average welfare losses due to the Great Recession for agents alive at the time of the shock are notably smaller in an economy with Social Security relative to an...
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While popular wisdom holds that the United States should save more now in anticipation of the aging of the baby boom generation, the optimal response to population aging from a macroeconomic perspective is not clear-cut. Indeed, Cutler, Poterba, Sheiner, and Summers ("CPSS",1990) argued that the...
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security was privatized in 1981, to assess the impact of such a reform on household saving rates. I find that the reform … percentage points. This increase in saving at the household level translates into an increase in national saving of more than two …
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savings, and the distribution of resources across generations. It is shown that the benefits of privatization most often …
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of the effects of pension wealth on other types of savings indicates that there is a negative effect of defined benefit …
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This paper examines the generational aspect of the current Medicare system and some stylized reforms. We find that the rates of return on Medicare for today's workers are higher than those for Social Security and that the Medicare system is shifting a greater share of the burden on future...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005393984