Title: Adequacy of savings for old-age in Europe
1Adequacy of savings for old-age in Europe
- Elsa Fornero, University of Turin and CeRP
- Annamaria Lusardi, Dartmouth College and NBER
- Chiara Monticone, University of Turin and CeRP
- CeRP Conference 2008
- "Financial security in retirement"
- September 18-19th 2008, Collegio Carlo Alberto
2An American prologue the worrisome baby
boomers
- A lively US debate on the adequacy of retirement
provisions of the large baby boom generation - fears of inadequate savings are echoed in the
press and in the political discussion - Research has produced mixed results
- more than 43 of American households are
considered at risk according to the National
Retirement Risk Index (CRR at Boston College) - financial illiteracy is widespread (i.e.,
according to a survey, 60 of Americans do not
understand the difference between social
security, a company pension and a 401 (K) plan) - Yet models based on (enriched versions of) the
life cycle model find less than 20 of households
have inadequate resources
31. Motivation and relevance for Europe
- Dramatic changes in the European population
structure declining fertility rates and
increasing longevity are expected to hamper
economic growth, and to challenge the welfare
state
Old-age dependency ratios (Visco 2006)
42. Definition and measurement of retirement
saving adequacy
- The concept of retirement saving adequacy should
combine two closely related dimensions - Individual dimension
- has to do with a sensible intertemporal
allocation of resources in a given market and
institutional context (e.g. generosity of public
provision and presence of saving instruments) - the life cycle model is the natural normative
benchmark - a household is said to be saving adequately if
it is accumulating enough wealth to be able to
smooth its marginal utility of consumption over
time in accordance with the optimizing model of
consumption (Engen et al. 1999, p. 70) - Pension system dimension
- refers to a well structured institutional design
for an efficient sharing and diversification of
risks, given individual preferences and financial
sustainability, and requires - intergenerational and intragenerational risk
sharing (Shiller, 1998) - a mixed system (Lindbeck and Persson, 2003),
combining PAYGO and funding - an appropriate combination of DB and DC formulae
(Gomes and Michaelides, 2003) - enhancement of individual responsibility, through
information and financial education (Lusardi
2007) - an appropriate design of workers choice
situations, e.g. pension schemes default options
(Madrian and Shea, 2001 Holzmann et al, 2005)
5Elements of realism and difficulties in
computation
- All measures can be made more realistic by
considering - (a) Real life complications
- Taxes
- Imperfect indexation of social security benefits
- Risks of too early retirement because of health
shocks, firms restructuring or other
contingencies - Imperfect annuity markets
- Illiquidity of retirement wealth (housing wealth,
in particular) - Risks of catastrophic health expenditure in
retirement - Risk of divorce (typically for a woman)
- (b) and facilitations
- Public health, subsidies and care
- Changes in the family composition (couples are
normally better situated than singles because of
their greater moderation) - Changes in consumption/leisure mix at retirement
and opportunities to economize - (c) Heterogeneity of individual situations
- Typically poor individuals have higher pension RR
because of progressivity in both the pension and
the tax system - Cohort and gender aspects (womens longer
longevity)
6Measures
W/Y
W
Y
Cr/Ca
P/Y
C
P
Age
Retirement
7A more realistic life-cycle
Imperf annuity mkt Illiquidity (house)
Investment risk Longevity risk
W
Smoothing of mg ut/cons Bad health outcomes
Economies of scale in hh Home production
Work-related expenses
Y
C
- Household composition
- Children in out
- Divorce
P
Imperf indexation Progressivity
Early ret (health or job shock)
Age
Ret
8Greater income and pension uncertainty have made
P/Y more elusive
- While retirement planning is difficult in a
stable environment, pension reforms greatly
complicate the task by downsizing past promises
and limiting both guarantees and indexation
mechanisms - the PAYGO pillar as a source of retirement income
has been retrenched - retirement ages have been raised
- replacement rates have been reduced
- benefits have been de-indexed from wages to
prices - occupational and personal pension plans, where
workers have greater choice but also greater
responsibility and risks, have been strengthened - DB schemes are being replaced with DC schemes
based on financial accumulation and actuarial
principles