Discussion paper

DP2202 Positive Arithmetic of the Welfare State

Why does the largest US welfare programme select its recipients by their age, rather than by their earnings or wealth? In a dynamic efficient overlapping generation economy with earnings heterogeneity, we analyze a welfare system composed of a within-cohort redistribution scheme and an unfunded social security system. The programme's size is determined in a bidimensional majoritarian election. For enough income inequality and elderly in the population, both welfare programs are supported as a structure-induced political equilibrium of a voting game played by successive generation of voters. Social security is sustained by a voting coalition of retirees and low-income young, intragenerational redistribution by low-income young. Two features are crucial: the retirees' political power, deriving from their homogeneous voting, and the intragenerational redistribution component of the social security. Therefore, to assess how changes in inequality affect the welfare state, the income distribution should be decomposed by age groups.

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Citation

Galasso, V and J Conde-Ruiz (1999), ‘DP2202 Positive Arithmetic of the Welfare State‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 2202. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp2202