Can Shift to a Funded Pension System Affect National Saving? The Case of Iceland

Across industrialised and developing countries public pension systems have been heavily reformed during the last two decades. The major concern relates the financial sustainability of pay-as-you-go pension schemes. The proposals to privatize social security lead to the creation of a multipillar syst...

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Main Authors: Mariangela Bonasia, Oreste Napolitano
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.asers.eu/journals/tpref/tpref-issues.html
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:srs:tpref1:2:v:1:y:2010:i:1:p:12-26 2023-05-15T16:47:58+02:00 Can Shift to a Funded Pension System Affect National Saving? The Case of Iceland Mariangela Bonasia Oreste Napolitano http://www.asers.eu/journals/tpref/tpref-issues.html unknown http://www.asers.eu/journals/tpref/tpref-issues.html article ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:31:57Z Across industrialised and developing countries public pension systems have been heavily reformed during the last two decades. The major concern relates the financial sustainability of pay-as-you-go pension schemes. The proposals to privatize social security lead to the creation of a multipillar system. This study assesses the validity of the effect of pension reforms on domestic savings in two steps: first, to test for the existence of a long-run relationship, we use an ARDL model; second, we employ the Kalman filter algorithm, in order to recover the parameter dynamics overtime. We analyse the case of Iceland because its pension system is characterized by a large mandatory private pillar. The empirical evidence supports the widely held view that growing mandatory pension funds financial assets has significantly positive impact on national saving. Moreover, we show that the pattern of the pension funds’ coefficients seems to capture well the economic dynamic of the period. The coefficients of the funded pillars illustrate a shift upward soon after the launch of the reforms in 1998. Later on, these coefficients show a negative trend till the middle of 2004 and they increase sharply until the beginning of 2006. Afterwards, following the Icelandic and international financial crisis, they strongly declines. national saving, pension funds, multipillar system, ARDL model, Kalman filter Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Pillar ENVELOPE(166.217,166.217,-77.583,-77.583)
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description Across industrialised and developing countries public pension systems have been heavily reformed during the last two decades. The major concern relates the financial sustainability of pay-as-you-go pension schemes. The proposals to privatize social security lead to the creation of a multipillar system. This study assesses the validity of the effect of pension reforms on domestic savings in two steps: first, to test for the existence of a long-run relationship, we use an ARDL model; second, we employ the Kalman filter algorithm, in order to recover the parameter dynamics overtime. We analyse the case of Iceland because its pension system is characterized by a large mandatory private pillar. The empirical evidence supports the widely held view that growing mandatory pension funds financial assets has significantly positive impact on national saving. Moreover, we show that the pattern of the pension funds’ coefficients seems to capture well the economic dynamic of the period. The coefficients of the funded pillars illustrate a shift upward soon after the launch of the reforms in 1998. Later on, these coefficients show a negative trend till the middle of 2004 and they increase sharply until the beginning of 2006. Afterwards, following the Icelandic and international financial crisis, they strongly declines. national saving, pension funds, multipillar system, ARDL model, Kalman filter
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Mariangela Bonasia
Oreste Napolitano
spellingShingle Mariangela Bonasia
Oreste Napolitano
Can Shift to a Funded Pension System Affect National Saving? The Case of Iceland
author_facet Mariangela Bonasia
Oreste Napolitano
author_sort Mariangela Bonasia
title Can Shift to a Funded Pension System Affect National Saving? The Case of Iceland
title_short Can Shift to a Funded Pension System Affect National Saving? The Case of Iceland
title_full Can Shift to a Funded Pension System Affect National Saving? The Case of Iceland
title_fullStr Can Shift to a Funded Pension System Affect National Saving? The Case of Iceland
title_full_unstemmed Can Shift to a Funded Pension System Affect National Saving? The Case of Iceland
title_sort can shift to a funded pension system affect national saving? the case of iceland
url http://www.asers.eu/journals/tpref/tpref-issues.html
long_lat ENVELOPE(166.217,166.217,-77.583,-77.583)
geographic Pillar
geographic_facet Pillar
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://www.asers.eu/journals/tpref/tpref-issues.html
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