Title: Optimal Taxation Paper 7, Part IIB Dr Toke Aidt
1Optimal TaxationPaper 7, Part IIBDr Toke Aidt
Lecture 7
2The optimal tax scheduleunder undertainty
c(y)
y
c(y)
c(y)
y
3The optimal tax schedule
- Trade off between
- Prudence Reducing the MTR results in more
precautionary action been taken (saving, effort,
education). - Risk aversion Reducing the MTR exposes
individuals to more risk - The optimal tax schedule balances the benefit of
social insurance with the disincentive to
self-insure
4MTR
P low
P high
y
5Intuition
- Little prudence high risk aversion increasing
MTRs. Why? - Little prudence most extra income is due to
luck rather than savings incentive effect of
high MTRs low. - High risk aversion preference for safe
average over uncertain extremes strong take
extra income off individuals with high incomes.
6Outline
- Why does the government provide pensions?
- PAYG vs Funded Pensions
- The demographic problem and sustainability
7Saving for retirement
Income
c,y
Asset path
Planned Consumption path
T
R
t
8Saving for retirement
- Consumption smoothing trough a perfect capital
market makes it rational for individuals to save
retirement - Precautionary saving motive if there is some
uncertainty about future income or consumption
need in old age.
9Rationale for government intervention
- Efficiency rationale
- A pension scheme may allow trades that can
improve the welfare of all. - Capital market imperfections.
- Redistribution rationale
- Inter-generational redistribution motivated by
systematic differences in productivity across
generations. - Intra-generational redistribution motivated by
desire to transfer resources over time within a
generation.
10Rationale for government intervention
- Paternalistic rationale
- Bail out myopic individuals who fail to save
sufficiently. - Insurance rationale
- Life span is uncertain
- Risks to earning potential while young
11Two types of government pension systems
PAYG Pension pension of current old paid for by
current young. Funded Pension pension of
current old paid for by savings when young.
12PAYG vs Funded pensionThe behavioural effects
- Funded system
- private savings are displaced by public savings
through the pension system, so aggregate savings
are unchanged. - Capital accumulation is unaffected
- PAYG system
- Private savings are reduced but without any
compensating increase in public savings, so
aggregate savings fall. - Capital accumulation is reduced.
13Efficiency rationale for a PAYG system
- An economy is dynamically inefficient if the
capital stock is greater than that which
maximises consumption per worker (the golden
rule).
f gtng gt efficient f ltng gt inefficient
14Efficiency rationale for a PAYG system
- A PAYG system reduces total savings and hence the
steady state capital stock. If an economy is
dynamically inefficient this - Benefits those who save less now
- Benefits those who get more consumption in the
future. - A funded system cannot achieve this because total
savings are unaffected.
15Relative Return on PAYG and Funded Pension
16Return on a PAYG System
- Each person (of whatever generation) pays a
proportion t of income when young - Benefits when old depend on contribution of
current young
17The Return on a Funded System
- Each person (of whatever generation) pays a
proportion t of income when young - This is invested in financial markets and earns
a market return equal to 1r - When old, the individual receives this return on
the initial payment
18The return comparison
19Comparison
- PAYG better than Funded Pension if the economy is
dynamically inefficient. - Return to PAYG system affected by demographic
shocks (aging) and by the long run growth
potential of the economy. - Return to funded system is not directly affected
by demographic shocks, but linked to financial
market risk.
20Comparison
- So, why have a PAYG state pension?
- high income growth?
- uncertainty about time of death (and no private
insurance)? - pensioners tend to be poor (low life-cycle wealth
relative to the young) but majority of pensioners
had similar life-cycle wealth?
21Comparison
- Why have a Funded Pension rather than no public
pension? - Myopia individuals dont save enough
- Imperfect capital or insurance markets
22The pension crises
23Sustainability
Demographic trends
24Funding Gaps
25What can be done?
- Switch from PAYG to a funded system
- Clean-break
- Cohort-specific
- PAYG can be made sustainable
- if benefits are falling
- retirement age is increased
- taxes are rising
- economic growth is fast enough
26Summary
- PAYG vs funded depends on r vs (ng)
- PAYG can be sustainable
- PAYG discourages saving
27What is next?
- Lindahl taxation and the benefit principle
- Taxation by concent