Factors Modulating the Attitude towards the Introduction of Pension Reforms: A Comparative Analysis
Recent demographic and social changes have constrained the
sustainability of the so called pay-as-you-go pension scheme
enforced worldwide. Reforms lengthening the working life and
increasing contributions are often perceived as the answer to the
issue although their introduction is often opposed by the public.
In this paper we analyze the motivation behind attitudes towards
pension and retirement and how these attitudes vary across
countries. We argue that anthropological inheritance accounts for
these differences together with social and economic factors.
Together they create norms among those experiencing similar
patterns. Using multi-level regressions applied to data from the
third round of the European Social Survey (ESS), we analyse
individuals? attitudes towards retirement and their attitudes
towards pension systems.