The question we ask is: within the set of a three-period-lived OLG
economies with a stochastic endowment process, a stochastic dividend
process, and sequentially incomplete complete markets, under what set
of conditions may a set of government transfers dynamically Pareto
dominate the laissez faire equilibrium? We start by characterizing
perfect risk sharing and find that it implies a strongly stationary set
of state-dependent consumption claims. We also derive the stochastic
equivalent of the deterministic steady-state by steady-state optimal
marginal rate of substitution. We show then that the risk sharing of
the recursive competitive laissez faire equilibrium of any overlapping
generations economy with weakly more than three generations is nonstationary
and that risk is suboptimally shared. We then show that
we can construct a sequence of consumption allocations that only depends
on the exogenous state and which Pareto dominate the laissez
faire allocations in an ex interim as well as ex ante sense. We also
redefine conditional Pareto optimality to apply within this framework
and show that under a broad set of conditions, there also exists a sequence
of allocations that dominates the laissez faire equilibrium in
this sense. Finally, we apply these tools and results to an economy
where the endowment is constant, but where fertility is stochastic, i.e.
the number of newborn individuals who enters the economy follows a
Markov Process.