Fiscal and welfare effects of raised fertility: OLG model estimates

In the context of the second demographic transition, many countries consider rising fertility through pro-family polices as a potentially viable solution to the fiscal pressure stemming from longevity. However, an increased number of births implies private and immediate costs, whereas the gains are not likely to surface until later and appear via internalizing the public benefits of younger and larger population. Hence, quantification of the net effects remains a challenge. We propose using an overlapping generations model with a rich family structure to quantify the effects of increased birth rates. We analyze the overall macroeconomic and welfare effects as well as the distribution of these effects across cohorts and study the sensitivity of the final effects to the assumed target value and path of increased fertility. We find that fiscal effects are positive but, even in the case of relatively large fertility increase, they are small. The sign and the size of both welfare and fiscal effects depend substantially on the patterns of increased fertility: if increased fertility occurs via lower childlessness, the fiscal effects are smaller and welfare effects are more likely to be negative than in the case of the intensive margin adjustments.

2019
@article{makarski2019fiscal, author = {Makarski, Krzysztof and Tyrowicz, Joanna and Malec, Magda}, title = {Fiscal and Welfare Effects of Raised Fertility in Poland: Overlapping Generations Model Estimates}, journal = {Population and Development Review}, volume = {45}, number = {4}, pages = {795-818}, year = {2019} }