By browsing this website, you acknowledge the use of a simple identification cookie. It is not used for anything other than keeping track of your session from page to page. OK
1

The impact of pensions, transfers and taxes on child poverty in Europe: the role of size, pro-poorness and child orientation

Bookmarks
Article

Diris, Ron ; Vandenbroucke, Frank ; Verbist, Gerlinde

Socio-Economic Review

2017

15

4

Oct.

745-775

income redistribution ; children ; poverty ; pension scheme ; welfare state

EU countries

Income distribution

https://doi.org/10.1093/ser/mww045

English

Bibliogr.

"We assess the impact of redistributive policy on child poverty across 29 European welfare states, using EU SILC 2005–2012. We distinguish between spending on pensions, spending on other cash transfers and taxation. For each of these instruments of redistribution, we further distinguish three features: size, pro-poorness and targeting towards households with children. Pensions are generally neglected in analyses on child poverty, but are relevant through the presence of two, partially offsetting, forces. Increased pension spending weakens the relative income position of children, but pensions also substantially contribute to the household income of children from multigenerational households. This ambiguous result signals a challenge: while reductions in pension spending may be desirable in the long run in several European welfare states, policymakers—especially in Southern and Eastern Europe—should be aware that this not only directly involves income losses for the elderly, but also for a non-negligible share of (predominantly poor) children."

Digital



Bookmarks