Social Security, Pensions and Annuities

2016
Sheshinski E. Anlässlich der Verabschiedung von Hans-Werner Sinn. ifo Schnelldienst [Internet]. 2016;69 :45. Publisher's Version
2013
Michael J. B, Eytan S, Michael J. B, Eytan S. OS—612). OPTIMAL INCOME REDISTRIBUTION WHEN INDIVIDUAL WELFARE. [Internet]. 2013. Publisher's VersionAbstract

Preliminary; not for quotation. NBER working papers are distributed informally and in limited number for comments only. They should not be quoted without written permission of the author. This report has not undergone the review accorded official NBER publications; in particular, it has not yet been submitted for approval by the Board of Directors. This research was supported by a contract with NBER from the [...]

Eytan S. Refundable Annuities (Annuity Options) by. [Internet]. 2013. Publisher's VersionAbstract

Individuals can insure themselves perfectly against uncertainty about the length of life by purchasing deferred annuities early in life. In the absence of other uninsurable uncertainties (e.g. income), there will be no residual purchases or sales of annuities later in life, thereby avoiding any adverse-selection. In contrast, the presence of such uncertainties creates an active residual annuity market based on the arrival of new information. We characterize the equilibrium in the residual annuity market and propose a new …nancial instrument, refundable annuities with a guaranteed refund price, which enables individuals who hold a portfolio of such annuities to better adjust [...]

2011
CHAZAN GUY. Israel Sets Steep Rise In Taxes On Oil, Gas. Wall Street Journal - Eastern Edition [Internet]. 2011;257 :A10. Publisher's VersionAbstract

The article reports on the plan of the Israeli government to increase taxes imposed on oil and gas companies, based on recommendations made by a committee of public finance experts, headed by Eytan Sheshinski.

Eytan S, Luis F. L-calva. Privatization and Its Benefits: Theory and Evidence. [Internet]. 2011. Publisher's VersionAbstract

Abstract: Privatization has been a key component of structural reform programs in both developed and developing economies. The aim of such programs is to achieve higher microeconomic efficiency and foster economic growth, as well as reduce public sector borrowing requirements through the elimination of unnecessary subsidies. Microeconomic theory tells us that incentive and contracting problems create inefficiencies due to public ownership, given that managers of state-owned enterprises pursue objectives that differ from those of private firms (political view) and face less monitoring (management view). Not only are the managers ’ objectives distorted, but the budget constraints they face are also [...]

2010
Altemeyer-Bartscher M, Rubbelke DTG, Sheshinski E. Environmental Protection and the Private Provision of International Public Goods. Economica [Internet]. 2010 :775. Publisher's VersionAbstract

International environmental protection like the combat of global warming exhibits properties of public goods. In the international arena, no coercive authority exists that can enforce measures to overcome free-rider incentives. Therefore decentralized negotiations between individual regions serve as an approach to pursue efficient international environmental protection. We propose a scheme which is based on the ideas of Coasean negotiations and Pigouvian taxes. The negotiating entities offer side-payments to counterparts in order to influence their taxation of polluting consumption. Side-payments, in turn, are self-financed by means of externality-correcting taxes. As we show, a Pareto-efficient outcome can be attained.

2009
Sheshinski E. Uncertain Longevity and Investment in Education. [Internet]. 2009. Publisher's VersionAbstract

It has been argued that increased life expectancy raises the rate of return on education, causing a rise in the investment in education followed by an increase in lifetime labor supply. Empirical evidence of these relations is rather weak. Building on a lifecycle model with uncertain longevity, this paper shows that increased life expectancy does not suffice to warrant the above hypotheses. We provide assumptions about the change in survival probabilities, specifically about the age dependence of hazard rates, which determine individuals' behavioral response w.r.t. education, work and age of retirement. Comparison is made between the case when individuals have [...]

Sheshinski E. Uncertain Longevity and Investment in Education. MPRA Paper [Internet]. 2009. Publisher's VersionAbstract

It has been argued that increased life expectancy raises the rate of return on education, causing a rise in the investment in education followed by an increase in lifetime labor supply. Empirical evidence of these relations is rather weak. Building on a lifecycle model with uncertain longevity, this paper shows that increased life expectancy does not suffice to warrant the above hypotheses. We provide assumptions about the change in survival probabilities, specifically about the age dependence of hazard rates, which determine individuals' behavioral response w.r.t. education, work and age of retirement. Comparison is made between the case when individuals have access to a competitive annuity market and the case of no insurance.

Eytan S. Longevity and Aggregate Savings. Discussion Paper Series [Internet]. 2009. Publisher's VersionAbstract

Two salient features of modern economic growth are the rise in aggregate savings rates and the steady increase in life expectancy. This paper links these processes, showing that under certain conditions economic theory supports the hypothesis that increased longevity leads to higher aggregate savings in steady state. The analysis is based on a lifecycle model with uncertain longevity in which individuals choose an optimum consumption path and a retirement age. Conditions on the age-specific pattern of improvements in survival probabilities are shown to ensure that individual savings rise with longevity and that aggregation preserves this result. Population theory (Coale (1972)) is used to link the steady-state age density function and the population's growth rate to individuals' survival probabilities. The importance of a competitive annuity market in avoiding unintended bequests is underscored.

Eytan S. Uncertain Longevity and Investment in Education. Discussion Paper Series [Internet]. 2009. Publisher's VersionAbstract

It has been argued that increased life expectancy raises the rate of return on education, causing a rise in the investment in education followed by an increase in lifetime labor supply. Empirical evidence of these relations is rather weak. Building on a lifecycle model with uncertain longevity, this paper shows that increased life expectancy does not suffice to warrant the above hypotheses. We provide assumptions about the change in survival probabilities, specifically about the age dependence of hazard rates, which determine individuals' behavioral response w.r.t. education, work and age of retirement. Comparison is made between the case when individuals have access to a competitive annuity market and the case of no insurance.

2008
Sheshinski E. Optimum Delayed Retirement Credit. The MIT Press; 2008. Publisher's VersionAbstract

This chapter discusses how benefits vary with the age of retirement beyond the earliest eligibility age, including how retiring ahead of the normal retirement age reduces benefits by a certain percentage annually, particularly in the United States. It cites the need for a good and flexible retirement system to accommodate diversity in terms of life expectancy, income levels, and the degree of difficulty in continuing labor. It describes a pattern in the United States called delayed retirement credit (DRC), and actuarial reduction factor (ARF). It also argues that the system should be neutral in its approach to individual retirement decisions, assuming that the system would preserve optimal individual decisions on retirement.

2007
Sheshinski E. Optimum and Risk-Class Pricing of Annuities. The Economic Journal [Internet]. 2007 :240. Publisher's VersionAbstract

When information on longevity (survival functions) is unknown early in life, individuals have an interest in insuring themselves against moving into different 'risk-classes' as their life expectancy is revealed. The First-Best allocation involves transfers across states of nature. With symmetric information, competitive equilibrium separates different risk classes and cannot provide such transfers because insurance firms are unable to precommit. When utility is invariant to risk-class realisation, the optimum entails uniform consumption and optimum retirement age independent of risk-class and an optimum social security scheme is superior to competitive equilibrium. When preferences depend on risk-class, welfare ranking of systems becomes indeterminate.

Eytan S. Optimum and Risk-Class Pricing of Annuities. Economic Journal [Internet]. 2007 :240. Publisher's VersionAbstract

When information on longevity (survival functions) is unknown early in life, individuals have an interest in insuring themselves against moving into different 'risk-classes' as their life expectancy is revealed. The "First-Best" allocation involves transfers across states of nature. With symmetric information, competitive equilibrium separates different risk classes and cannot provide such transfers because insurance firms are unable to "precommit". When utility is invariant to risk-class realisation, the optimum entails uniform consumption and optimum retirement age independent of risk-class and an optimum social security scheme is superior to competitive equilibrium. When preferences depend on risk-class, welfare ranking of systems becomes indeterminate. Copyright 2007 The Author(s). Journal compilation Royal Economic Society 2007.