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Do Private Household Transfers to the Elderly Respond to Public Pension Benefits? Evidence from Rural China

Plamen Nikolov and Alan Adelman

Papers from arXiv.org

Abstract: Ageing populations in developing countries have spurred the introduction of public pension programs to preserve the standard of living for the elderly. The often-overlooked mechanism of intergenerational transfers, however, can dampen these intended policy effects as adult children who make income contributions to their parents could adjust their behavior to changes in their parents' income. Exploiting a unique policy intervention in China, we examine using a difference-in-difference-in-differences (DDD) approach how a new pension program impacts inter vivos transfers. We show that pension benefits lower the propensity of receiving transfers from adult children in the context of a large middle-income country and we also estimate a small crowd-out effect. Taken together, these estimates fit the pattern of previous research in high-income countries, although our estimates of the crowd-out effect are significantly smaller than previous studies in both high-income and middle-income countries.

Date: 2020-06, Revised 2020-06
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-age
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Published in The Journal of the Economics of Ageing 14 (Fall): 100204 (2019)

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Journal Article: Do private household transfers to the elderly respond to public pension benefits? Evidence from rural China (2019) Downloads
Working Paper: Do Private Household Transfers to the Elderly Respond to Public Pension Benefits? Evidence from Rural China (2019) Downloads
Working Paper: Do Private Household Transfers to the Elderly Respond to Public Pension Benefits? Evidence from Rural China (2019) Downloads
Working Paper: Do Private Household Transfers to the Elderly Respond to Public Pension Benefits? Evidence from Rural China (2019) Downloads
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