2024
Language:
English

The effect of the social security on aggregate effective labor supply: the role of endogenous human capital and of selection effects

We quantify the importance of endogenous human capital and selection effects for counterfactual analysis of social security (SS) reforms. The literature typically performs these analyses using structural models featuring exogenous productivity profiles. However, this approach faces two issues: (i) productivity estimation is subject to selection bias, and (ii) productivity is endogenous to the SS reforms. This paper estimates a quantitative overlapping generations model featuring endogenous human capital accumulation using US data. First, we eliminate the SS and find a large positive effect on aggregate effective labor supply. Next, we build variants of this model to quantify the two issues (i) and (ii). We find that the endogeneity issue (ii) is quantitatively more important than the selection bias issue (i).