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Contrasting approaches to old-age income protection in Korea and Taiwan

Authors
Choi, Young JunKim, Jin Wook
Issue Date
10월-2010
Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Keywords
old age; poverty; universal benefits; means-tested benefits; social insurance; Korea; Taiwan; East Asia
Citation
AGEING & SOCIETY, v.30, pp.1135 - 1152
Indexed
SSCI
AHCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
AGEING & SOCIETY
Volume
30
Start Page
1135
End Page
1152
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/115543
DOI
10.1017/S0144686X10000413
ISSN
0144-686X
Abstract
Old-age income security has become one of the most important social policy issues in two East Asian emerging welfare states, South Korea and Taiwan, as they transform at a remarkable pace into societies with a representation of older people approaching that of western countries. During the last two decades, the two countries have developed different forms of social protection for older people. South Korea has expanded social insurance pensions with means-tested benefits, whereas Taiwan has introduced fiat-rate old-age allowance programmes that exclude the rich rather than target the poor. much has been written about these programmes, but their actual performance in reducing old-age poverty has not been thoroughly examined. This paper analyses the anti-poverty effect of these programmes, firstly by describing recent developments in the two countries, and secondly by examining headcount poverty rates and the size and incidence of the 'poverty gap' using nationally-representative micro-household datasets. We argue that while the programmes have increasingly reduced old-age income security, the different policy choices have resulted in distinctive welfare outcomes in the two countries. In the final section of the article, we discuss the long-term implications of the recent policy reforms.
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