Working Paper

Endogenous Longevity and Optimal Tax Progressivity

Burkhard Heer, Stefan Rohrbacher
CESifo, Munich, 2020

CESifo Working Paper No. 8691

We study the impact of endogenous longevity on optimal tax progressivity and inequality in an overlapping generations model with skill heterogeneity. Higher tax progressivity decreases both the longevity gap and net income inequality, but at the expense of lower average lifetime and lower aggregate labor supply and income. We find that the welfare-maximizing income tax is less progressive than in the case of exogenous longevity and that the present US income tax should redistribute less. Our result is robust to the empirically observed range of labor supply elasticity and the assumptions of both missing annuity markets and tax deductibility of private health expenditures.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics and Growth
Keywords: health and inequality, demography, second-best, optimal taxation, personal income distribution, overlapping generations
JEL Classification: I140, J100, H210, H510, D310