People often find it difficult to make the right decision about retirement savings. The payoffs are in the distant future, and the promise of pleasure tomorrow can mean pain today. The wrong decision yields an instant gain, the outcome is uncertain, the decision can be postponed without immediate penalty. In the end, the pressures of immediate gratification, delayed benefit, the unknown, the uncertain, the uncomfortable, ally against wise decisions. Yet, while many people yield to these influences, many others make the right choice. That drives us to ask why. Recent research has examined various approaches to promoting retirement investment. One promising strategy, automatic enrollment, taps into an old theory about the functional order of ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of PsychologyS...
This paper asks whether economists ’ model of fully rational decision makers can explain saving for ...
Only a minority of American households feels “confident” about retirement saving adequacy, and littl...
This paper evaluates some of the key lessons of behavioral economics and finance research over the l...
With the growth of defined contribution retirement plans, plan participants are increasingly expecte...
Retirement planning has been the major concern for many years and is becoming an increasingly promin...
Standard economic theories of saving implicitly assume that households have the cognitive ability to...
Long gone are the days when most American workers could rely on their employers to manage their reti...
This thesis comprises three chapters that investigate, from a behavioural economics perspective, how...
Most efforts to influence participants in workplace-based retirement plans to take full advantage of...
Increasing uncertainty surrounding social security benefits and public sector pension plans is pushi...
This article examines how behavioral economics can be used to improve the spending decisions of reti...
Individuals face many challenges when developing a retirement plan. Hurdles arise at different stage...
Why is the public so underprepared for retirement? We studied the saving behavior of a large cross- ...
Although extensive choice seems appealing, research shows that it may hinder motivation to buy and d...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of PsychologyS...
This paper asks whether economists ’ model of fully rational decision makers can explain saving for ...
Only a minority of American households feels “confident” about retirement saving adequacy, and littl...
This paper evaluates some of the key lessons of behavioral economics and finance research over the l...
With the growth of defined contribution retirement plans, plan participants are increasingly expecte...
Retirement planning has been the major concern for many years and is becoming an increasingly promin...
Standard economic theories of saving implicitly assume that households have the cognitive ability to...
Long gone are the days when most American workers could rely on their employers to manage their reti...
This thesis comprises three chapters that investigate, from a behavioural economics perspective, how...
Most efforts to influence participants in workplace-based retirement plans to take full advantage of...
Increasing uncertainty surrounding social security benefits and public sector pension plans is pushi...
This article examines how behavioral economics can be used to improve the spending decisions of reti...
Individuals face many challenges when developing a retirement plan. Hurdles arise at different stage...
Why is the public so underprepared for retirement? We studied the saving behavior of a large cross- ...
Although extensive choice seems appealing, research shows that it may hinder motivation to buy and d...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of PsychologyS...
This paper asks whether economists ’ model of fully rational decision makers can explain saving for ...
Only a minority of American households feels “confident” about retirement saving adequacy, and littl...