养老金改革的性别影响:一个跨国分析

E. James, A. C. Edwards, R. Wong
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引用次数: 32

摘要

养老金制度可能对性别产生不同的影响,因为与男性相比,女性在正规劳动力市场工作的可能性更小,即使在正式劳动力市场工作,她们的工资也更低。最近的多支柱养老金改革收紧了工资缴款和福利之间的联系,批评者认为这会伤害到女性。相比之下,这些改革的支持者认为,它将通过消除有利于男性的扭曲和在新制度中更有针对性的再分配来帮助妇女。为了验证这些相互矛盾的说法,并更广泛地分析替代养老金制度的性别影响,作者研究了三个拉丁美洲国家——阿根廷、智利和墨西哥——新旧养老金制度的不同影响。基于家庭调查数据,他们模拟了具有代表性的男性和女性的工资和就业历史,他们在新老规则下可能产生的养老金,以及男性和女性因改革而产生的相对收益或损失。作者发现,在新制度下,女性确实积累了私人年金,但只有男性的30- 40%。但是,由于新的公共支柱明确针对低收入者(其中许多是女性),以及私人支柱的支出受到限制,特别是联合年金要求,这种影响得到了缓解。由于这些转移,女性的终身退休福利总额达到男性的60- 80%,而对于“全职”女性来说,她们的福利等于或超过了男性。因此,女性是养老金改革的最大受益者。对于接受这些转移支付的妇女来说,在所有三个国家,新制度中终身福利的男女比例都超过旧制度。以共同年金的形式从丈夫到妻子的家庭内部私人转移发挥了最大的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Gender Impact of Pension Reform: A Cross-Country Analysis
Pension systems may have a different impact on gender because women are less likely than men to work in formal labor markets and earn lower wages when they do. Recent multipillar pension reforms tighten the link between payroll contributions and benefits, leading critics to argue that they will hurt women. In contrast, supporters of these reforms argue that it will help women by the removal of distortions that favored men and the better targeted redistributions in the new systems. To test these conflicting claims and to analyze more generally the gender effect of alternative pension systems, the authors examine the differential impact of the new and old systems in three Latin American countries-Argentina, Chile, and Mexico. Based on household survey data, they simulate the wage and employment histories of representative men and women, the pensions they are likely to generate under the new and old rules, and the relative gains or losses of men and women because of the reform. The authors find that women do accumulate private annuities that are only 30-40 percent those of men in the new systems. But this effect is mitigated by sharp targeting of the new public pillars toward low earners, many of whom are women, and by restrictions on payouts from the private pillars, particularly joint annuity requirements. As a result of these transfers, total lifetime retirement benefits for women reach 60-80 percent those of men, and for"full career"women they equal or exceed benefits of men. Also as a result, women are the biggest gainers from the pension reform. For women who receive these transfers, female/male ratios of lifetime benefits in the new systems exceed those in the old systems in all three countries. Private intra-household transfers from husband to wife in the form of joint annuities play the largest role.
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