Measuring the degree of government intervention on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

19
Measuring the degree of government intervention on intergenerational family transfers (IFT) using NTA estimates Concepció Patxot Elisenda Renteria Miguel Sánchez Romero Guadalupe Souto

description

Measuring the degree of government intervention on intergenerational family transfers (IFT) using NTA estimates Concepció Patxot Elisenda Renteria Miguel Sánchez Romero Guadalupe Souto. A proposal to the Incentives Working Group ( IWG ) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Measuring the degree of government intervention on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

Page 1: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

Measuring the degree of government intervention on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

using NTA estimates

Concepció Patxot Elisenda Renteria

Miguel Sánchez RomeroGuadalupe Souto

Page 2: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

A proposal to the Incentives Working Group (IWG)

1. Integrated results for GA and NTA for Spain: some implications for the sustainability of welfare state (paper finished for Spain)2. Measuring the degree of government intervention on intergenerational family transfers (IFT) using NTA estimates (paper almost finished for Spain)3. A proposal of a comparative paper on indicators

Concepció Patxot Elisenda Renteria

Miguel Sánchez RomeroGuadalupe Souto

Page 3: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

• Ageing threats the sustainability of one of the Welfare State –one of greatest social achievements of the past century.

• Effects of population ageing on the economy

– L scarce– K relatively abundat

Effects depend on:– Preferences on savings: retirement/bequest/precaution motive + intergenerational transfers– Other endogenous variables: Even fertility!

• Effects on budget depend on: – Increase in demographic dependency and…– Increase in ratio benefit receivers/tax payers (wage us the tax base, so…) – NTA/GA allows to obtain some helpful indicators (Stiglitz commission)

• What happens to the rest of age reallocations?! It matters for intra/intergenerational redistribution and there is no an integrated theoretical model accounting for all the transfers.– We can measure the degree of intervention to both sides

¿ ↑ k=K/L? ¿ ↑ w ↓ r

General motivación

Page 4: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

Measuring the degree of government intervention on intergenerational family transfers (IFT) using NTA estimates

• Why is ageing a problem for the welfare state?:.. Besides the traditional constraints on public policy• Tax schedules that are as neutral as possible

• A new difficulty emerges: most of the social programs (pensions, health care, education, etc.) – Entail not only intra but intergenerational redistribution– It implies intertemporal movement of public funds, usually financed –

either explicitly or implicitly – on a pay-as-you-go basis (PAYG).– Most outstanding example: Pension system (explicit PAYG), but also health,

etc. – The “transition problem”: The initial gift must be born by the current active

who should raise a new fund so they bear 2 burdens (a third one: child rearing!!!)

• A deeper question: Why should de government interfere in the forward or backward intergenerational transfers (from parents to their offspring or vice versa).

Page 5: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

TransfersMoney, time and time &effort

Types Motives Substitution from Market or Government?

Reasons for public intervention (+/-)

To young dependents Birth (IF)Subsistence (IF)Health Care, personal relationsEducation (IF)Bequests (EF)Gifts

Altruism (Fwd)/ Social contractExchange

Liquidity constraints prevent market substitution!

Health care scarcely substitutable

Need to consider bargaining between parents (marriage)…

+ Redistribution, equal opportunities, intergenerational mobility

+ External positive effects on growth (and liquidity constraints)- External effect on fertility (not on saving plans)- PAYG finance subject to demographic risk

Old dependents SubsistenceHealth care, personal relationsGifts

Altruism (Bkw)Social contractExchange

Demonstration effect as a reinforcing device on social contract??

In general more substitutable than to young

RedistributionMyopia Uninsurable risk (Long term care)

Issues

Social changes occurred

• Affecting lifecycle timing: Increase in life expectancy and delay in entry in the labor market due to education . A reduction on the productive/dependent period?• Female participating : Reduces the availability of non market work

Effects on capital accumulation

• Private transfers might be “fully funded” (except if myopia) or human capital funded (if invested on education of the young)

Page 6: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

Motivation• A deeper question: Why should de government interfere in

the forward or backward intergenerational transfers (from parents to their offspring or vice versa).

• A too complex issue to model, but we can do something using NTA estimates:– Measure the degree of intervention in both sides (paper

for Spain)• Comparative analysis (general paper)

– Measure the first and second demographic dividend (Mason & Lee 2006)

– A more transparent way of measuring the room left for the second DD: A sinthetic indicator (general paper)

Page 7: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

TG from 41,74

13,14 LCD from 41,31 73,65122.85% 140.20%

78.31% 156.33%

101.33% 19.78%

74,99

29.10%

11,48

14,29 62.33TF from 43.43

TF from 74.94

Measuring the degree of government intervention on IFT“Modified” Lee Arrows

Page 8: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

Transfers Expenditure to GDP(%)

Forward looking (from parents to kids) 2.004 2.050

Education 4,41 4,21

Family 0,5 0,47

Health (to the young) 0,71 0,69

Total forward looking 5,60 5,37

Backward looking (from adult children to parents) 2.004 2.050

Retirement pensions 6,02 13,54

Long term care 0,33 0,97

Health (to the elderly) 4,58 7,81

Total backward looking 12,16 22,32

Source: Ferrer and Patxot (2007)

Measuring the degree of government intervention on IFT: “Modified” Lee Arrows

Page 9: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

0.00%

10.00%

20.00%

30.00%

40.00%

50.00%

60.00%

70.00%

80.00%

90.00%

100.00%

19

00

19

10

19

20

19

30

19

40

19

50

19

60

19

70

19

80

19

90

20

00

20

10

20

20

20

30

20

40

20

50

20

60

20

70

20

80

20

90

21

00

21

10

21

20

21

30

21

40

21

50

YDR 0-15 / 16-64 ODR 65+ / 16-64 Total DR

(Back to the effects on budget) The Spaish demography

Page 10: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

NTA and GA an integrated view

Baseyear, t

EconomicVariables

DemographicVariables:Population (P)

tttt TFTGABRLCD

Standard NTA: Baseyear Cross Section

tABR

tTF

tTG

tLCD

etP

GA: forward lookingSustainability of TG

Fist DDBackard looking

TimeGA

newbornGA

Future

Page 11: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

GA/NTA indicators• Tipical GA sustainability indicator

– PV future net deficits/PV future GDP– = “Intertemporal” Debt/ “Intertemporal” GDP– Evolution of Budget balance/GDP

• NTA indicators: Base year and changing population– “Economic” Support Ratio (ESR)

• L/C (weighted by NTA profiles)

• Another option: LCD/LCS = Aggregate - LCD/aggregate + LCD (LCS)– Evolution of financing sources of LCD– Sustainability Indicators (more GA)ABR/Yl needed an interesting “Residual”

• Issues– 3-4 “economic sustainability” indicators– (NTA) TG is “zero” in a closed economy , but still: its evolution is interesting– General equilibrium AND wealth account missing

LCDABR

LCDTF

LCDTG 1

llll YABR

YTF

YTG

YLCD

Page 12: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

Figure 6 Evolution of the share of TG, TF and ABR in LCD (1908-2150)

-100%

-50%

0%

50%

100%

150%

200%

250%19

0819

1719

2619

3519

4419

5319

6219

7119

8019

8919

9820

0720

1620

2520

3420

4320

5220

6120

7020

7920

8820

9721

0621

1521

2421

3321

42

TG/LCD TF/LCD ABR/LCD

Page 13: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

Figure 7 Evolution of economic sustainability indicators for Spain (1908-2150)

-0,2

-0,1

0

0,1

0,2

0,3

0,4

0,5

0,619

0819

1719

2619

3519

4419

5319

6219

7119

8019

8919

9820

0720

1620

2520

3420

4320

5220

6120

7020

7920

8820

9721

0621

1521

2421

3321

42

TG/Yl TF/Yl ABR/Yl LCD/Yl

Page 14: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

0

0,1

0,2

0,3

0,4

0,5

0,6

1908

1917

1926

1935

1944

1953

1962

1971

1980

1989

1998

2007

2016

2025

2034

2043

2052

2061

2070

2079

2088

2097

2106

2115

2124

2133

2142

ABR/Yl Ya/Yl S/Yl LCD/Yl

Figure 8 Evolution of the ABR aggregates (1908-2150)

Page 15: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

DiscussionA comprative paper exploring the romm left for the second demographic

dividend

• Sustainability ABR/Yl• Balance: “Modified” Lee Arrows• Explicit funding and implicit or pre “funding” : (More modified rows)

Where about in the demographic transition?• Best/worst moment?

Page 16: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

Thank you

Page 17: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)
Page 18: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

Spain

Page 19: Measuring the degree of government intervention  on intergenerational family transfers (IFT)

Comparative