Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
986697 Review of Economic Dynamics 2011 23 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper analyzes the dynamic politico-economic equilibrium of a model where repeated voting on social security and the evolution of household characteristics in general equilibrium are mutually affected over time. In particular, we incorporate within-cohort heterogeneity in a two-period Overlapping-Generation model to capture the intra-generational redistributive effect of social security transfers. Political decision-making is represented by a probabilistic voting à la Lindbeck and Weibull (1987). We analytically characterize the Markov perfect equilibrium, in which social security tax rates are shown to be increasing in wealth inequality. A dynamic interaction between inequality and social security leads to larger social security programs. In a model calibrated to the U.S. economy, the dynamic interaction is shown to be quantitatively important: It accounts for more than half of the social security growth in the dynamics. We also perform some normative analysis, showing that the politico-economic equilibrium outcomes can be fundamentally different from the Ramsey allocation.

► This paper analyzes a dynamic politico-economic equilibrium of social security. ► We analytically characterize the Markov perfect equilibrium. ► We find that social security tax rates are shown to be increasing in wealth inequality. ► An interaction between inequality and social security leads to larger social security. ► The dynamic interaction is shown to be quantitatively important.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
Authors
,