Inequality and Poverty Across Generations in Europe

Research Seminars

The adverse consequences of inequality—social, economic, and political—have been increasingly
recognized and under scrutiny. While global inequality has declined significantly over the past three
decades, the evolution of inequality within countries is mixed. During the last decade, overall income
inequality in the European Union (EU) has remained stable, but a closer look reveals that this
reflected opposing developments between the real incomes of the young and the elderly. Before the
global financial crisis, the young and the elderly had broadly similar risk of relative poverty in the EU.
More recently, the risk of poverty increased significantly for the young and, to a lesser extent, for the
rest of the working age population, while it declined sharply for the elderly.

Labor market developments as well as the design of both social protection and fiscal consolidation
likely contributed to this outcome. The crisis exacerbated preexisting high youth unemployment and
a trend toward less stable jobs. High youth unemployment is associated with lower youth incomes
and greater risk of youth poverty. Social protection systems are ill-equipped to address rising youth
poverty. They shield the elderly’s real incomes from the impact of the crisis but offer only limited
assistance to young unemployed individuals. Moreover, the latest fiscal consolidation efforts were
more focused on programs helping the working age population rather than the elderly.

High and prolonged youth unemployment and poverty have long-lasting effects on young people’s
productivity and incomes, as well as their social prospects. The problems of youth unemployment
and poverty are reaching macroeconomic proportions in several European economies. While the
ongoing cyclical upturn improves job opportunities for the young, policymakers need to do more to
ensure that today’s young do not fall further behind the rest of the population.

To lower the chances of young people becoming poor and suffering lifetime income losses,
facilitating their integration into the labor market is essential. To that effect, employers could be
given incentives to hire young people, including through targeted reductions in the labor tax wedge
or tax credits at the lower end of the wage scale. A better integration of the young into the labor
market also requires improving and adapting their skills. Thus, spending on education and training
needs to be protected from fiscal consolidation and its efficiency needs to be raised, including
through better cooperation on the delivery of programs among employers, employee
representatives, and governments.

Better access to social protection systems for workers in less stable jobs could help preserve labor
market flexibility, while significantly reducing youth poverty and income inequality. Policymakers
could achieve this goal with reforms of unemployment and non-pension benefits. For example,
eligibility requirements could be reviewed as well as the design, age targeting, and efficiency of
transfers. A more uniform approach to indexation across benefits could also help along with, more
generally, better consideration of the distributional impact across age groups of public expenditure
policy. Finally, tax reform could rebalance the tax burden across generations and increase the
redistributive impact of taxation, by increasing progressivity on income taxes and by giving a greater
redistributive role to taxes on capital income and wealth.

Venue

ZEW – Leibniz-Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung

People

Tingyun Chen

Tingyun Chen // International Monetary Fund, Washington D.C.

Irene Yackovlev

Irene Yackovlev // International Monetary Fund, Washington D.C.

Contact

Research Associate
Philipp Dörrenberg
To the profile

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ZEW – Leibniz-Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung

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