This project evaluates how workers might invest their Personal Retirement Account (PRA) funds between safe and risky assets, depending on whether they are offered a rate of return guarantee on the risky asset. We focus on how asset allocation decisions might differ depending on participants’ attitudes about risk and regret. If, for example, the return on the risky asset turns out to be very high when a worker retires, he might regret not having allocated a large enough portion of his contributions to the risky asset. On the contrary, if the stock market does poorly, the retiree might regret having invested at all in that asset. We show that anticipated disutility from regret can have a potent effect on investment choices in a PRA. I...
This study centers on the assessment of psychological value of guarantees in pension products and th...
This paper describes the risks implied by a mixed system of Social Security pension benefits with di...
In this paper we investigate pension preferences and the effect of individual freedom of choice on r...
We model how asset allocation decisions in a defined contribution (DC) pension plan might vary with ...
Working Paper: WP 2012-274The rapid transition from defined benefit (DB) pension plans to defined co...
In the wake of the financial crisis and continued volatility in international capital markets, there...
In the wake of the financial crisis and continued volatility in international capital markets, there...
Two issues may have a tremendous impact on the adequacy of retirement income for today's workers: th...
Abstract. In this paper, which presents a simplified behavioral finance model, we incorporate regret...
Proposals for mandatory private saving accounts differ in the degree of investment discretion that t...
Capital market volatility spurs interest in protecting retirement accounts; one such approach is to ...
There is growing effort to incorporate psychological behaviors into decision models from economics a...
In the last twenty years, a growing number of defined benefit (DB) pension plans have been replaced ...
The dramatic shift from traditional pension plans to participant-directed 401(k) plans has increased...
Pension Risk and Corporate Investment: This paper studies the relation of systematic pension risk ...
This study centers on the assessment of psychological value of guarantees in pension products and th...
This paper describes the risks implied by a mixed system of Social Security pension benefits with di...
In this paper we investigate pension preferences and the effect of individual freedom of choice on r...
We model how asset allocation decisions in a defined contribution (DC) pension plan might vary with ...
Working Paper: WP 2012-274The rapid transition from defined benefit (DB) pension plans to defined co...
In the wake of the financial crisis and continued volatility in international capital markets, there...
In the wake of the financial crisis and continued volatility in international capital markets, there...
Two issues may have a tremendous impact on the adequacy of retirement income for today's workers: th...
Abstract. In this paper, which presents a simplified behavioral finance model, we incorporate regret...
Proposals for mandatory private saving accounts differ in the degree of investment discretion that t...
Capital market volatility spurs interest in protecting retirement accounts; one such approach is to ...
There is growing effort to incorporate psychological behaviors into decision models from economics a...
In the last twenty years, a growing number of defined benefit (DB) pension plans have been replaced ...
The dramatic shift from traditional pension plans to participant-directed 401(k) plans has increased...
Pension Risk and Corporate Investment: This paper studies the relation of systematic pension risk ...
This study centers on the assessment of psychological value of guarantees in pension products and th...
This paper describes the risks implied by a mixed system of Social Security pension benefits with di...
In this paper we investigate pension preferences and the effect of individual freedom of choice on r...