Publication | Closed Access
Hunting the Unobservables for Optimal Social Security
17
Citations
17
References
2009
Year
Income SecurityLawWelfare EconomicsSocial Security SystemEconomic Policy AnalysisEconomic AnalysisSocial InsuranceMacroeconomic ModelEconomic InequalityOptimal Tax RateEconomicsPublic PolicyUnobservable Preference ParametersWage IncomeOptimal Social SecurityFederal Income TaxSocial SecurityMacroeconomicsEconomic PolicyPublic EconomicsBusinessSocial PolicyMicroeconomics
We study the optimal size of a pay-as-you-go social security program for an economy composed of both permanent-income and hand-to-mouth consumers. While previous work on this topic is framed within a two-period partial equilibrium setup, we study this issue in a life-cycle general equilibrium model. Because this type of welfare analysis depends critically on unobservable preference parameters, we methodically consider all parameterizations of the unobservables that are both feasible and reasonable—all parameterizations that can mimic key features of macro data (feasible) while still being consistent with micro evidence and convention (reasonable). The baseline model predicts that the optimal tax rate is between 6 percent and 15 percent of wage income.
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