How Do Consumers Finance Increased Retirement Savings?

From Taha Choukhmane and Christopher Palmer

 

Higher retirement savings might not translate into net wealth accumulation if, rather than cutting spending, individuals reduce their non-retirement savings and take on more debt. We use newly merged deposit-, credit-, and pension-account data from a large UK financial institution to examine a policy that gradually increased retirement contributions from 2% to 8% of salary between March 2018 and April 2019. For every £1 reduction in take-home pay due to higher employee contributions, employees cut their spending by only £0.34 (especially in the restaurant and leisure categories) and f inanced the remaining with lower deposit balances and higher credit card debt. Those with lower initial deposit balances cut their spending the most, while those with significant liquid savings draw down their deposits. Since employees cannot draw down their balances indefinitely, we use a lifecycle model–calibrated to match the observed short-term responses–to predict that long-run spending responses are larger but feature similar heterogeneity. A social planner concerned about undersaving for retirement due to heterogeneous present bias should, therefore, avoid targeting retirement interventions at high-liquidity individuals who are both less likely to cut their spending and less likely to be present-biased.

Taha Choukhmane

Taha Choukhmane

Class of 1947 Career Development Assistant Professor

Featured Publication

"How Do Consumers Finance Increased Retirement Savings?"

Choukhmane, Taha and Christopher John Palmer, Working Paper. November 2023.

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Learn More about Retirement

Current Retirement projects from the Consumer Finance Initiative cover topics including Target Date Funds, retirement savings and portfolio choices, and racial gaps in retirement savings.  Find more Retirement research here.