Year:
2023
Autor(s):
Bruno Ricardo Delalibera; Pedro Cavalcanti Ferreira; Rafael Machado Parente
Serie number: 838
Abstract:
In many countries, the regulations governing public and private pension systems, hiring procedures, and job contracts differ. Public sector employees tend to have longer tenures and higher wages compared to workers in the private sector. As such, social security reforms can affect both retirement decisions and sectoral choices. We study the effects of social
security reforms on retirement and sectoral behavior in an economy with multiple pension
systems. We develop a life-cycle model with three sectors - private formal, private informal and public - and endogenous retirement. In a model calibrated to Brazil, we quantitatively assess the long-run effects of reforms being discussed and implemented across countries. Among them, we study the unification of pension systems and increasing the minimum retirement age. We find that these reforms affect the decision to apply to a public job, the profile of savings over the life cycle, and informality. In the long run, these reforms lead
to higher output and capital, reduced informality, and average welfare gains. They also drastically reduce the social security deficit.