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Microsimulation and the analysis of poverty and inequality an illustration

M anos Matsaganis & P anos Tsakloglou Athens University of Economic s FBBVA Microsimulation Workshop Madrid 15-16 November 2004. Microsimulation and the analysis of poverty and inequality an illustration. Microsimulation , poverty and inequality (1).

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Microsimulation and the analysis of poverty and inequality an illustration

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  1. Manos Matsaganis & Panos TsakloglouAthens University of EconomicsFBBVA Microsimulation WorkshopMadrid 15-16 November 2004 Microsimulation and the analysis of poverty and inequality an illustration

  2. Microsimulation, poverty and inequality (1) • MS can help analyse the effect of policy changes • examine redistributive impact of current policies • explore impact of reforms vs. some baseline • answer counterfactual («what if»-type) questions

  3. Microsimulation, poverty and inequality (2) • MS can help produce various types of output • analyse the impact of policy changes in terms of: • changes in the income distribution • poverty and inequality • distribution of gains and losses • i.e. winners and losers in the entire population ... • ... or by population group (lone parents, elderly etc.) • fiscal implications of policy changes • excl. administrative costs

  4. Microsimulation, poverty and inequality (3) • MS can help calculate RRs and METRs • replacement rates • does work pay? • marginal effective tax rates • poverty trap? • unemployment trap?

  5. Microsimulation, poverty and inequality (4) • MS can help disentangle separate effects • taxes and benefits interact • e.g. raising benefit rates will raise pre-tax incomes, so it may move recipients to a higher tax band ... • ... while lowering taxes will raise pre-tax incomes, so it may cause recipients of income-tested benefits to lose eligibility • no other way to account (separately and jointly) for the effect of taxes and benefits on final disposable incomes

  6. An illustration Matsaganis M., O’Donoghue C., Levy H., Coromaldi M., Mercader-Prats M., Rodrigues C.F., Toso S., TsakloglouP. «Child poverty and family transfers in southern Europe» Working Paper EM 2/04 Microsimulation Unit, University of Cambridge http://www.econ.cam.ac.uk/dae/mu/emod.htm

  7. 1. Introduction • 2. Data and methodology • 3. Incidence of child poverty by household type • 4. Distributional impact of family transfers • 5. Simulating reforms • 6. Discussion and policy implications

  8. The paper • aims to assess the impact • of family transfers • on child poverty • in southern Europe • Greece • Italy • Spain • Portugal • using microsimulation • the tax-benefit model EUROMOD

  9. Family transfers • definition • all income transfers to families with children • child benefits (non-contributory) • family allowances (contributory) • tax relief for dependent children • non-cash benefits (e.g. child care) not included

  10. Child poverty • issue has risen to prominence • poor children by definition “deserving” • social costs of child poverty vs. benefits of early intervention • anti-poverty measures  human capital investments • high future returns! • political commitments • Blair pledge to eliminate child poverty in Britain by 2020 • Commission proposal to halve child poverty in the EU by 2010 (not endorsed by the Council)

  11. Southern Europe • tradition of “familialism” • strength of informal safety nets • but are family resources adequate for intra-family redistribution? • subsidiary role of formal safety nets • public assistance to families meagre / not available at all • reliance of tax benefits  what about those too poor to pay tax? • uneven coverage gaps in protection

  12. 1. Introduction • 2. Data and methodology • 3. Incidence of child poverty by household type • 4. Distributional impact of family transfers • 5. Simulating reforms • 6. Discussion and policy implications

  13. EUROMOD (1) • what is it? • a tax-benefit model for all 15 “old” EU members • construction funded by EC TSER / FP5 programmes • 40 persons in 18 centres led by Cambridge University • main objective: comparability • what can it do? • analyse policy changes in a comparative setting • examine impact of current policies • explore impact of reforms • answer “what if?”-type questions

  14. EUROMOD (2) • what data does it rely upon? • EC Household Panel (Greece / Spain / Portugal) • Bank of Italy Survey of Household Income & Wealth • updated to 1998 • 2001 dataset in progress • what sort of policies does it simulate? • income taxes, social contributions • social assistance, housing, family, unemployment and some social insurance benefits, e.g. social pensions • 1998 & 2001 rules applied • 2003 update in progress

  15. EUROMOD (3) • what types of output does it produce? • estimates of policy impact in terms of: • income distribution • fiscal costs • distribution of gains and losses (winners and losers) • calculations of: • marginal effective tax rates • replacement rates

  16. EUROMOD (4) • temporary difficulties? • no simulation of benefits in kind(publicly provided services) • full tax compliance (no tax evasion) • no targeting errors (100% take up / no leakage) • given sufficient effort (and funding), all of the above may be fully or partly amenable to treatment

  17. EUROMOD (5) • structural weaknesses? • static microsimulation • no behavioural responses • e.g. labour supply • consumer demand etc. • nonetheless: • dynamic models sensitive to assumptions • in the short term, static MS may be sufficient

  18. 1. Introduction • 2. Data and methodology • 3. Incidence of child poverty by household type • 4. Distributional impact of family transfers • 5. Simulating reforms • 6. Discussion and policy implications

  19. Table 2a Child poverty rates

  20. Table 2b Contribution to aggregate child poverty

  21. 1. Introduction • 2. Data and methodology • 3. Incidence of child poverty by household type • 4. Distributional impact of family transfers • 5. Simulating reforms • 6. Discussion and policy implications

  22. Table 7a Estimated value of cash benefits

  23. Table 7b Estimated value of tax relief

  24. Graph 1 Concentration curves

  25. Table 11a Impact on child poverty rates

  26. Table 11b Impact on child poverty gaps

  27. Table 12 Redistributive impact of family transfers

  28. PRE A / A+B+C PGE A / A+D post-transfer disposable income poverty line C B D pre-transfer disposable income A households ranked by income Figure 1 Target efficiency of social transfers

  29. Table 13 Target efficiency of family transfers

  30. 1. Introduction • 2. Data and methodology • 3. Incidence of child poverty by household type • 4. Distributional impact of family transfers • 5. Simulating reforms • 6. Discussion and policy implications

  31. Reforms (1) • reforming family transfers • abolish all current policies • introduce universal child benefits • what if ...?

  32. Reforms (2) • why universal child benefits? • obvious solution to the problem of gaps in coverage • ... though controversial • good for illustration • easy to explain • simple to implement

  33. Reforms (3) • which universal child benefits? • various issues involved • benefit level • variation by age • variation by no. of children etc. • 5 variations of UCB reform 2 “artificial” universal child benefits • poverty-neutral / budget-neutral 3 “actually existing” universal child benefits • British / Danish / Swedish schemes ... ... adjusted in terms of average male f-t earnings

  34. Table 14 Simulated reforms

  35. Table 15a Impact of simulated reforms(I): child poverty rates

  36. Table 15b Impact of simulated reforms(II): intensity of child poverty

  37. Table 17 Winners vs. losersreform II (budget neutral CB)

  38. Table 19 Winners vs. losersreform IV (Danish UCB)

  39. Table 21 Fiscal effects of simulated reforms

  40. 1. Introduction • 2. Data and methodology • 3. Incidence of child poverty by household type • 4. Distributional impact of family transfers • 5. Simulating reforms • 6. Discussion and policy implications

  41. Concluding remarks (1) • performance of family transfers modest • many poor families are ineligible for assistance (GR / IT) • ... or receive low benefits (SP / PT) • non-refundable tax credits exclude poor families by design

  42. Concluding remarks (2) • performance of UCBs disappointing? • replacing current policies by UCBs would not reduce the number of poor children by much – and could even increase it! • impact of UCBs weak or negative where current policies provide substantial benefits to a considerable subset of the low-income population (as in Italy)

  43. Concluding remarks (3) • headcount poverty too severe a test for UCBs • where existing policies leave coverage gaps, those currently ineligible for assistance will be better off under a UCB even when they remain below the poverty line • headcount poverty rates cannot capture such improvements • bringing in the FGT index (implying more concern for those at the bottom of the income distribution) does more justice to the anti-poverty impact of UCBs

  44. Concluding remarks (4) • not all UCBs are the same • the Danish UCB, paying higher amounts to younger children, emerges ahead of the others in terms of generosity and anti-poverty effectiveness • The British and the Swedish UCBs, though different in structure (the former paying a higher rate to the eldest child, the latter rising in value with family size) have similar effects on child poverty and fiscal costs

  45. Concluding remarks (5) • playing field uneven • 100% take up a reasonable assumption for universal benefits – not so for currrent income-tested policies • in favour of universal child benefits • low administrative costs • no stigma • no adverse labour incentives (i.e. no poverty traps)

  46. Concluding remarks (6) • the case for UCB wider • horizontal redistribution • from single tax payers to families with children • children a (partly) public good • social citizenship • access to certain benefits can be a citizen right • political economy considerations • narrowly targeted programmes at risk of backlash • support for universal programmes broader-based

  47. Concluding remarks (7) • a basic trade off at work • more generous UCBs are more effective but costlier • but: current spending on family transfers far too low • hard to reduce poverty via internal reallocations alone

  48. Concluding remarks (8) • way forward? • judiciously combine a universal (even if low) income base ... • to address the problem of gaps in coverage • to achieve horizontal redistribution ... with more targeted (non-categorical) interventions • to direct extra resources to families in need • to improve effectiveness of both type I and II

  49. Concluding remarks (9) • bring in services ... • there is more to fighting child poverty than cash benefits alone • universal access to affordable, good-quality family services a high priority • a child care guarantee a promising route out of poverty

  50. Concluding remarks (10) • ... but avoid the other extreme • services a complement of cash benefits, not a substitute • proper design of income transfers still relevant!

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