Working Paper

Inherited Wealth and Demographic Aging

Harun Onder, Pierre Pestieau
CESifo, Munich, 2016

CESifo Working Paper No. 5984

The role of inherited wealth in modern economies has increasingly become under scrutiny. This study presents one of the first attempts to shed light on how demographic aging could shape this role. We show that, in the absence of retirement annuities, or for a given level of annuitization, both increasing longevity and decreasing fertility should reduce the inherited share of total wealth in a given economy. Thus, aging is not likely to explain a recent surge in this share in some advanced economies. Shrinking retirement annuities, however, could offset and potentially reverse these effects. We also show that aging could increase the size of individual bequests vis-à-vis real wages. However, these bequests will be more unequally distributed if aging is driven by a drop in fertility. In comparison, the effect of increasing longevity on their distribution in non-monotonic.

CESifo Category
Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics and Growth
Public Finance
Keywords: inherited wealth, inheritance, aging, inequality, social security
JEL Classification: D140, D310, D640, D910, E210, H550, J110