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Norwegian

Pension Reform and the Efficiency-Equity Trade-Off: Impacts of Removing an Early Retirement Subsidy

Link to article:

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Authors:

Andersen, A.G., S. Markussen, K. Røed

Year:

2020

Reference:

Andre skrifter
IZA Discussion Paper No. 12918

Summary

We provide empirical evidence that the removal of work disincentives embedded in retirement earnings tests can increase old-age labor supply considerably, but it does so at the cost of more income inequality. Causal effects are identified based on a reform of the Norwegian early retirement program, which entailed that adjacent birth cohorts were exposed to completely different work incentives from age 62. The reform removed a strict retirement earnings test such that pension wealth was redistributed from early to late retirees. Given the pre-existing employment and earnings patterns, this implied a considerable rise in old-age income inequality. In principle, this could have been offset by changes in the labor supply. We estimate that the reform triggered a 42% increase in hours worked during the ages covered by early retirement options. However, as the labor supply responses were of similar magnitudes across the earnings distribution, they did little to offset the rise in inequality. As measured by the Gini coefficient, inequality in overall old-age income rose by approximately 0.03 (17%).

Project:

Oppdragsgiver: Norges Forskningsråd
Oppdragsgivers prosjektnr.: 270875
Frisch prosjekt: 1673 - Inequality and social sustainability of the Norwegian pensjon system after the reform