Ponthiere, Gregory
[UCL]
Leroux, Marie-Louise
[UQAM]
We examine the redistributive impact of working time regulations in an economy with unequal lifetimes. We Örst compare the laissez-faire equilibrium with the ex post egalitarian optimum, where the realized lifetime well-being of the worst off (usually the short-lived) is maximized, and show that, unlike the laissez-faire, this social optimum involves an increasing working time age profile and equalizes the realized lifetime well-being of the short-lived and the long-lived. We then examine whether working time regulations can compensate the short-lived. It is shown that uniform working time regulations cannot improve the situation of the short-lived with respect to the laissez-faire, and can only reduce well-being inequalities at the cost of making the short-lived worse off. However, age-specific regulations involving lower working time for the young and higher working time for the old make the short-lived better off, even though such regulations may not fully eradicate well-being inequalities.
Bibliographic reference |
Ponthiere, Gregory ; Leroux, Marie-Louise. Working time regulation, unequal lifetimes and fairness. In: Social Choice and Welfare, Vol. 51, no.1, p. 347-464 (2018) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/239858 |