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Workers’ Employment Rates and Pension Reforms in France: The Role of Implicit Labor Taxation

Didier Blanchet, Antoine Bozio, Simon Rabate and Muriel Roger

PSE-Ecole d'économie de Paris (Postprint) from HAL

Abstract: France has experienced a clear reversal of older workers' labor force par-ticipation (LFP) and employment rates over the last 15 years. These two rates had continuously declined in the 1970s and the 1980s for the 60–64 age group, bringing employment rates at a low 10 percent for both genders.

Date: 2021
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Published in Axel Börsch-Supan; Courtney C. Coile. Social Security Programs and Retirement around the World. Reforms and Retirement Incentives, University of Chicago Press, 2021, 978-0226674100

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Related works:
Working Paper: Workers’ Employment Rates and Pension Reforms in France: The Role of Implicit Labor Taxation (2021)
Working Paper: Workers’ Employment Rates and Pension Reforms in France: The Role of Implicit Labor Taxation (2021)
Working Paper: Workers’ Employment Rates and Pension Reforms in France: The Role of Implicit Labor Taxation (2021)
Chapter: Workers' Employment Rates and Pension Reforms in France: The Role of Implicit Labor Taxation (2019) Downloads
Working Paper: Workers' Employment Rates and Pension Reforms in France: the Role of Implicit Labor Taxation (2019) Downloads
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