The age-profile of invisible transfers: The true size of asymmetry in inter-age reallocations

Note that this article is written by CWW-affiliated researchers who use comparable methods but were part of a different project.

Gál, R., Szabó, E., and Vargha, L., 2015. "The age-profile of invisible transfers: The true size of asymmetry in inter-age reallocations". The Journal of the Economics of Ageing, 5: 98-104.

ABSTRACT:

We argue that the institutional composition of funding consumption in the two dependent sections of the lifecycle, childhood and old age, are different. To put it sharply, children are raised by their parents, the elderly rely on society. Since the reallocation of resources within and between households are not registered in National Accounts, the majority of the resources transferred to children are not visible in contrast to resources flowing to the elderly, which are almost entirely observed in public statistics. For our analysis we apply a recent extension of National Accounts, called the National Transfer Accounts, which include private transfers; and a further, experimental extension, the National Time Transfer Accounts, which quantifies the value of time transferred among household members in the form of unpaid household labor. We show that less than one third of the full transfer package flowing to children is registered in the National Accounts and another roughly one third is made visible by the National Transfer Accounts. The remaining one third, which is the value of parents caring for their children, is made visible by the National Time Transfer Accounts. The corresponding shares in funding old age are quite different: 90 percent is observed in public statistics and the two accounting extensions unfold only a bit less than 10 percent.

 
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Women's Economic Activity and Gender Dividends

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Analysis of non-remunerated production in Costa Rica