Evaluating the impact of social security contribution rate, delayed retirement age, and employment rate on pension replacement rate: An overlapping generation (OLG) model analysis
被引:0
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作者:
Tian, Ying
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h-index: 0
机构:
Chinese Acad Agr Sci, Inst Agr Econ & Dev, Beijing 100081, Peoples R ChinaChinese Acad Agr Sci, Inst Agr Econ & Dev, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China
Tian, Ying
[1
]
Ma, Haitao
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Cent Univ Finance & Econ, Beijing 100081, Peoples R ChinaChinese Acad Agr Sci, Inst Agr Econ & Dev, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China
Ma, Haitao
[2
]
Tunio, Fayaz Hussain
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Shaheed Zulfiqar Ali Bhuto Univ Law, Karachi, PakistanChinese Acad Agr Sci, Inst Agr Econ & Dev, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China
Tunio, Fayaz Hussain
[3
]
机构:
[1] Chinese Acad Agr Sci, Inst Agr Econ & Dev, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China
[2] Cent Univ Finance & Econ, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China
[3] Shaheed Zulfiqar Ali Bhuto Univ Law, Karachi, Pakistan
Old age;
Retirement;
Social security;
Social contribution;
Social benefit;
D O I:
10.1016/j.rie.2024.100954
中图分类号:
F [经济];
学科分类号:
02 ;
摘要:
This study evaluates the impact of the social security contribution rate, late retirement age, and employment rate on pension replacement rate by using an overlapping generation (OLG) model that provides insightful measures on the endogenous pension replacement of retired employees in China. We conducted empirical analysis, Bootstrap & Sobel Test (BST) for mediating effect and used fixed and mediated effects models on panel data of 31 Chinese provinces to achieve specific employment promotion and pension replacement rates. The late employment rate is positively significant and correlated with the social security contribution rate (SSCR), which shows the late retirement age can significantly reduce SSCR. The optimal combination identified in the late retirement age that decreasing SSCR. The above results indicate that the intermediary effect is significant. Simultaneously, SSCR does play an intermediary role in the relationship between the late retirement age and the employment rate. The late retirement age affects the employment rate through the social security contribution rate; thus, the late retirement age reduces a corporate social security contribution rate and labor cost and then prompts the enterprise to increase employment demand. Furthermore, BST mediating effects show that the SSCR significantly affects the late retirement age and employment rate. We conclude effective policy reforms can alleviate the late retirement age dilemma because a decline in the social security contribution rate causes a 1 % reduction in the social security contribution rate causing the 0.41055 percent late retirement age yearly.