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General Equilibrium Effects of Pension Reforms to Increase Retirement Income in Canada

Author

Listed:
  • Bruno Rainville
  • Nabil Annabi
  • Maxime Fougère
  • Bruno Rainville

Abstract

It is generally acknowledged that the Canadian retirement income system (RIS) has successfully contributed to poverty alleviation among seniors and helped maintain an adequate and relatively stable income replacement rate. However, increased longevity, the trend decline in registered pension plans (RPP) coverage and lower returns to individual savings could compromise the adequacy of income replacement rates for particular groups of future retirees among lower and middle-income earners. In this context, this paper examines the long-run economic and welfare impact of making the retirement income system more generous via different policy options. The analysis is conducted using a life-cycle computable general equilibrium (CGE) model with endogenous time allocation decisions and human capital accumulation. The three-tier Canadian RIS is represented in the model. In particular, retirement benefits from private pension plans are derived from a fully funded pension scheme and a PAYG system. The model is calibrated with Canadian data and generates a baseline solution which accounts for population ageing. Simulation results suggest that the necessary changes in pension contribution rates would cause some macroeconomic adjustments over the medium to long-run. Overall, better economic and welfare outcomes are achieved when pension increases are financed through a fully-funded pension scheme, because it results in less distortions on labour supply decisions. Sensitivity analyis to alternative model assumptions suggest that the impacts of higher contributions are underestimated when workers do not adjust their hours of work or time allocated to human capital activities. Another aspect to consider is the interaction effect with the Guaranteed Income Supplement and the potential impact of alternative options on retirement decisions by skill level.

Suggested Citation

  • Bruno Rainville & Nabil Annabi & Maxime Fougère & Bruno Rainville, 2011. "General Equilibrium Effects of Pension Reforms to Increase Retirement Income in Canada," EcoMod2011 2948, EcoMod.
  • Handle: RePEc:ekd:002625:2948
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Keith Ambachtsheer, 2008. "The Canada Supplementary Pension Plan (CSPP): Towards an Adequate, Affordable Pension for All Canadians (also available in French)," C.D. Howe Institute Commentary, C.D. Howe Institute, issue 265, May.
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