Working Paper

Low Altruism, Austerity, and Aversion to Default: Are Countries Converging to the Natural Debt Limit?

Henning Bohn
CESifo, Munich, 2013

CESifo Working Paper No. 4270

Democracies around the world are making promises to the old at the expense of future generations. I interpret this as reflecting low altruism—a discount rate on children’s utility greater than the world interest rate—and I examine the implications in a small open economy with overlapping generations. A focus is on the public sector: The model includes public capital in production and public education as determinant of human capital. I examine to what extent both are crowded out by spending on debt and retiree entitlements. In the model, altruism towards children determines bequests, government debt, and the time-path of consumption. Altruism towards parents influences incentives to default. If altruism is low, voters demand fiscal policies that extract substantial resources from future generations. Public debt rises until debt service requires maximum taxes forever, and an era of austerity ensues: investment in human capital declines to a lower bound, and reduced human capital discourages investment in private and public capital. The threat of default enters as a constraint that may protect future generations.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics and Growth
Keywords: government debt, overlapping generations, altruism, default
JEL Classification: F340, H630