Keuschnigg, ChristianChristianKeuschniggJaag, ChristianChristianJaagKeuschnigg, MirelaMirelaKeuschnigg2023-04-132023-04-132010-10-07https://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/handle/20.500.14171/9581710.1007/s10797-010-9134-zThis paper investigates the labor market impact of four often proposed policy measures for sustainable pensions: strengthening the tax benefit link, moving from wage to price indexation of benefits, lengthening calculation periods, and introducing more actuarial fairness in pension assessment. We consider the impact on three margins of aggregate labor supply, retirement behavior, job search, and hours worked.We provide some analytical results and use a computational model to demonstrate the economic impact of recent pension reform in Austria. Reducing the distortion in the retirement decision by introducing pension supplements and discounts conditional on the chosen retirement date promises the largest gains.We also find that the pension reform is far from sufficient to offset the fiscal implications of projected demographic change in Austria.enPension reformretirementjob searchlife-cycle unemploymentPension reform, retirement, and life-cycle unemploymentjournal article