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Targets missed: Three case studies exploiting the linked SHARE-RV data

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Targeting is an important aim for social policy. Three case studies in this paper reflect typical short-comings in the targeting design of pension reforms. The first case study examines how well work disability and receipt of disability insurance match in Germany. We show that the 2001 reform has not systematically improved target quality. The second case study examines whether the 2014 introduction of a new pathway of early retirement without actuarial adjustments has reached individuals who are less healthy because they have worked a long time in an arduous job. We find that the target population is actually healthier than the comparison group. Third, a much discussed supplemental pension benefit for households in risk of poverty would miss its target population by far; less than 40% of individuals eligible for the benefit supplement have a per-capita net household income in the lowest third of the income distribution. Since similar reforms are currently debated in many European countries, the three German case studies may serve as examples how to better target public pension policies.

Publikationsdetails
Boersch-Supan

Axel Börsch-Supan

csm_bucher_01_c574cfaa96

Tabea Bucher-Koenen

csm_high_res-img_3059_Hochformat_9b753aaf17

Nicolas Goll

csm_csm_felizia-12-0663-38_32615a547b_74ebc3b808

Felizia Hanemann

2019
Max Planck Institute for Social Law and Social Policy, Munich Center for the Economics of Aging (MEA)
Munich
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