TY - JOUR AU - Krueger,Dirk AU - Perri,Fabrizio TI - Public versus Private Risk Sharing JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 15582 PY - 2009 Y2 - December 2009 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w15582 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w15582.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Dirk Krueger Department of Economics University of Pennsylvania 3718 Locust Walk Philadelphia, PA 19104 Tel: 215/898-6691 Fax: 215/573-2057 E-Mail: dkrueger@econ.upenn.edu Fabrizio Perri University of Minnesota Department of Economics 4-177 Hanson Hall Minneapolis, MN 55455 Tel: 612/625-7504 Fax: 612/624-0209 E-Mail: fperri@umn.edu AB - Can public insurance through redistributive income taxation improve the allocation of risk in an economy in which private risk sharing is limited? The answer depends crucially on the fundamental friction that limits private risk sharing in the first place. If risk sharing is incomplete because some insurance markets are missing for model-exogenous reasons (as in Bewley, 1986 and Aiyagari, 1994) publicly provided risk sharing via a tax system generally improves on the allocation of risk. If instead private insurance markets exist but their use is limited by the absence of complete enforcement (as in Kehoe and Levine, 1993 and Kocherlakota, 1996) then the provision of public insurance can crowd out private insurance to such an extent that total consumption insurance is reduced. By reducing income risk the tax system increases the value of being excluded from private insurance markets and hence weakens the enforcement mechanism of these contracts. In this paper we theoretically characterize and numerically compute equilibria in an economy with limited enforcement and a continuum of agents facing realistic income risk and tax systems with various degrees of risk reduction (progressivity). We find that the crowding-out effect of public insurance on private insurance in the limited enforcement model can be quantitatively important, as is the positive insurance effect of taxation in the Bewley model. ER -