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Title: Investing for the Old Age: Pensions, Children and Savings
Author(s): Vincenzo Galasso, Roberta Gatti and Paola Profeta
Publication Date: May 2008
Keyword(s): fertility, financial markets, intergenerational transfers and PAYG pension systems
Programme Area(s): Public Economics
Abstract: In the last century most countries have experienced both an increase in pension spending and a decline in fertility. We argue that the interplay of pension generosity and development of capital markets is crucial to understand fertility decisions. Since children have traditionally represented for parents a form of retirement saving, particularly in economies with limited or non-existent capital markets, an exogenous increase of pension spending provides a saving technology alternative to children, thus relaxing financial (saving) constraints and reducing fertility. We build a simple two-period OLG model to show that an increase in pensions is associated with a larger decrease in fertility in countries in which individuals have less access to financial markets. Cross-country regression analysis supports our result: an interaction between various measures of pension generosity and a proxy for the development of financial markets consistently enters the regressions positively and significantly, suggesting that in economies with limited financial markets, children represent a (if not the only) way for parents to save for old age, and that increases in pensions amount effectively to relaxing these constraints.
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Bibliographic Reference
Galasso, V, Gatti, R and Profeta, P. 2008. 'Investing for the Old Age: Pensions, Children and Savings'. London, Centre for Economic Policy Research. https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=6825