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Adequacy of Saving for Old-Age in Europe

This paper discusses the adequacy of saving for old age in Europe, focusing on the comparison of economic resources with lifetime earnings. It explores various factors such as income replacement rate, changes in household composition, mix of pension and savings, and other relevant issues. The paper also highlights the relevance of the U.S. experience and the need for data to implement measures of economic preparation.

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Adequacy of Saving for Old-Age in Europe

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  1. Adequacy of Saving for Old-Age in Europe Discussion by Michael Hurd

  2. Topic most developed in U.S. • Data • But more interesting topic in U.S. because of greater dependence on savings and private pensions • If public pension is sole source of financing, debate is whether pensions are large enough.

  3. Popular press and some research • “Baby-boomers headed for poverty in retirement!” • “60% not adequately prepared!” • “Need $2M in retirement assets!” • Etc.

  4. Yet.. • Current retired doing fine • Cohort studies show improvements (or at least not getting worse) • Age 51-56 in 1992 • Age 51-56 in 2004 at least as well off as measured by saving plus pension wealth What is going on?

  5. How to think about problem? Two persons with different lifetime earnings Should have different levels of economic resources in retirement...which one “more adequate” Comparison requires comparing economic resources with lifetime earnings for each person

  6. Most common comparison Income replacement rate Income at retirement relative to income before retirement Simple case • r = 0 • annuitization so that consumption = income after retirement

  7. replacement rate = A/E (70%) earnings annuity E consumption A 20 65 85 Age

  8. Slightly more complex case Increasing income with age

  9. replacement rate = A/E (60%) earnings annuity E consumption A

  10. Better comparison Average lifetime earnings rather than final earnings Already more difficult...data requirements, interest rate assumptions etc But what about changes in household composition?

  11. replacement rate = A/E (35%) Aunt Tilly visits Ann born

  12. This household will want to allocate fewer resources to retirement phase • Will want lower replacement rate whether measured with respect to final income or life-time income • Thus in relatively simple situation, no universal replacement rate

  13. Another situation • No pensions • Only savings • Income in retirement is small...interest on wealth • Clear: income replacement rate makes no sense

  14. Actual situation • Mix between pension and savings • Varies across people and across countries • Solution in literature: annuitize savings • But people don’t annuitize • Not an accurate description of saving adequacy

  15. Other issues • the differing role of taxes for households at different points in the income distribution; • work-related expenses; • the time horizon or survival curve of the household; • returns to scale in consumption: reduced spending once one of the partners dies; • the changing consumption profile with age; • Differential mortality

  16. Married. College graduate Single. Less than high school education Those with fewer resources need fewer resources

  17. One additional problem • Different uncertainties after retirement • Insurance incomplete and varies from person to person and across countries

  18. All these problems remain when savings annuitized and added to pensions And no solution to this problem

  19. replacement rate = A/E (35%) Aunt Tilly visits Ann born

  20. Inevitably drawn to an economic model to make comparisons • But what model? • Life-cycle model says what an informed utility maximizer would do. • Obvious starting point • Does not lead to income replacement rate concept

  21. What do we see in U.S. when use life-cycle model? • Compare actual wealth with optimal wealth • Over-saving!(Schulz et al, 2006) • But lifetime utility below optimum • Compare consumption at retirement (and associated with life-cycle path) with economic resources Almost 80% adequately prepared (Hurd and Rohwedder, 2008)

  22. How did households achieve this? • We don’t know • All we can do is to assess outcome

  23. Relevance for Europe • With reduction in state DB pensions larger mix of savings and private pensions • U.S. experience may be relevant for future

  24. This paper • Conceptualize situation • Input into debate • But to implement measures of economic preparation need data • Is there something between income replacement and full-scale life-cycle model? • Excellent start

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