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Financial Literacy

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Workers are increasingly responsible for saving & investing their retirement assets. ... Joint project with Punam Keller (Prof. of Marketing, Tuck School of Business) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Financial Literacy


1
Financial Literacy Planning Implications for
Retirement Wellbeing
Presentation to the 3rd ESRC Seminar
Series Personal Finance I Savings, Pensions
and Debt March 17, 2006
  • Annamaria Lusardi
  • Dartmouth College NBER
  • Paper and related research at
  • www.dartmouth.edu/alusardi/

2
Significance
  • Workers are increasingly responsible for saving
    investing their retirement assets.
  • What influences these decisions?
  • Are they well-equipped to make the decisions?

3
Life cycle/permanent income model
  • Posits that consumers
  • Save and work given life-time budget constraints
  • Look ahead plan for the future
  • Understands basic economics (e.g. interest rates,
    inflation, risk diversification)

4
A famous permanent income consumer
  • When he won the Nobel prize in Economics, Milton
    Friedman was asked how he would spend the prize
    money.
  • He replied I have already spent most of it

5
Other work
  • In previous work, I have shown that the majority
    of older workers do not plan for retirement.
  • Lusardi (1999, 2002, 2003)
  • Workers have little knowledge of crucial
    variables for planning Social Security and
    pensions.
  • Mitchell (1988), Bernheim (1995, 1998), Gustman
    and Steinmeier (2004)

6
Other related work
  • Household finance
  • Campbell (2006)
  • Mistakes made by households and importance of
    defaults
  • Choi, Madrian and Laibsons work
  • The effects of financial education on saving
  • Bernheim and Garrett (2003)

7
To evaluate the working of such model
  • We devised a module on Financial Literacy
    Planning for the 2004 Health and Retirement Study
    (HRS)
  • Financial Literacy
  • Do people understand the basic working of
    interest rates, inflation, and risk
    diversification?
  • Planning
  • Do people calculate how much to save for
    retirement? How well do they plan?

8
Some qualifications
  • People could consult others when making financial
    decisions.
  • People could make good decisions even without
    knowledge (or precise knowledge).
  • It is not clear how much people should know.
    Saving and investing involve using complex
    assets, such as indexed annuities, etc.

9
3 questions on Financial Literacy (I)
  • Compound Interest
  • Suppose you had 100 in a savings account and
    the interest rate was 2 per year. After 5
    years, how much do you think you would have in
    the account if you left the money to grow?
  • i) more than 102
  • ii) exactly 102
  • iii) less than 102
  • iv) dont know (DK)
  • v) refuse to answer.

10
Financial Literacy (II)
  • Inflation
  • Imagine that the interest rate on your savings
    account was 1 per year and inflation was 2 per
    year. After 1 year, would you be able to buy
  • i) more than today with the money in this
    account
  • ii) exactly the same as
  • iii) less than today
  • iv) DK
  • v) refuse.

11
Financial Literacy (III)
  • Stock Risk
  • Do you think the following statement is true or
    false? Buying a single company stock usually
    provides a safer return than a stock mutual
    fund.
  • i) True
  • ii) False
  • iii) DK
  • iv) Refuse.

12
Financial Literacy Results
See Table 1 NB only 34 correctly answer all 3
questions only 56 correctly answer Inflation
Compound Interest.
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19
Differences in Financial Literacy Across
Demographics Groups
  • When accounting for demographics together, the
    variables that remain significant to explain
    correct responses are
  • Compound Interest age (-), male (), Black
    Hispanic (-), education ()
  • Inflation age (-), male (), Black Hispanic
    (-), education (), baby-boomers cohort (-)
  • Stock Risk age (-), male (), Black (-),
    education ()

20
Extensions
  • I devised financial literacy questions for a
    household survey for the Dutch Central Bank.
  • I devised financial literacy and planning
    questions for the Rand Internet Panel, which
    surveys younger respondents.

21
Changing the wording of the question
  • Each respondent is assigned randomly to one
  • of the two versions
  • Do you think that the following statement is true
    or false?
  • Buying a single company stock usually provides a
    safer return than a stock mutual fund.
  • Buying a stock mutual fund usually provides a
    safer return than a single company stock.

22
Responses to different versions
Pearson chi2(3) 184.67 (p0.000)
23
A simple question about bonds and stocks
  • Each respondent is assigned randomly to one
  • of the two versions
  • Do you think that the following statement is true
    or false?
  • Stocks are normally riskier than bonds.
  • Bonds are normally riskier than stocks.

24
Responses to different versions
Pearson chi2(3) 6.47 (p0.091)
25
A question about bond prices
  • Each respondent is assigned randomly to one
  • of the two versions
  • If interest rates fall, what should happen to
    bond prices? Rise fall stay the same DK,
    refusal.
  • If interest rates rise, what should happen to
    bond prices? Rise fall stay the same DK,
    refusal.

26
Devising questions about literacy
Pearson chi2(3) 23.22 (p0.000)
27
3 questions on Retirement Planning
  • Trying to plan
  • Have you ever tried to figure out how much your
    household would need to save for retirement?
  • Developing a plan
  • Have you developed a plan for retirement
    saving?
  • Sticking to the plan
  • How often have you been able to stick to this
    plan? Would you say
  • i) always ii) mostly iii) rarely or iv) never?

28
What we find
  • Tried
  • Have you ever tried to figure out how much your
    household would need to save for retirement?

Developed a plan Have you developed a plan for
retirement saving?
Stuck to the plan How often have you been able
to stick to the plan?
29
Prevalence of retirement planners
See Table 2 Panel B
30
Which tools do people use for planning?
See Table 3
NB ΒΌ of planners have not used any of these
tools.
31
The effects of financial literacy
  • Are the more financially literate
  • more likely to plan?
  • more likely to save?
  • more likely to invest in complex assets?

32
Analysis of Simple, Serious, and Successful
Planners
33
Analysis of Simple, Serious, and Successful
Planners Accounting for Differences in
Demographic Characteristics
34
Analysis of Stock Ownership
a Race, Gender, Marital Status, Born in US,
Education, Age, Baby-Boomer Cohort
35
Analysis of Checking Account Ownership
a Race, Gender, Marital Status, Born in US,
Education, Age, Baby-Boomer Cohort
36
The Effects of Financial Literacy Wealth
37
Extensions How to make people save
  • Devise messages to alert households of the need
    to save.
  • Devise programs to increase the effectiveness of
    financial education.
  • Joint project with Punam Keller (Prof. of
    Marketing, Tuck School of Business)

38
Summary of findings
  • Only 1/3 of respondents have basic knowledge of
    key economic variables interest rates,
    inflation, and risk diversification.
  • Fewer than 1/3 have attempted to calculate how
    much they need to save for retirement. Even fewer
    (19) follow through.
  • People use a variety of tools to plan for
    retirement, including informal means such as
    talking to family and friends.
  • Financial literacy is strongly correlated with
    planning, savings, and asset ownership.

39
Implications
  • Financial knowledge among workers cannot be taken
    for granted.
  • A one-time/one-size-fits-all financial
    education program is likely to be ineffective in
    stimulating saving and retirement financial
    security.

40
Concluding remarks
  • Saving for retirement is a complex decision. We
    need to incorporate difficulties in making
    decisions into our saving models.
  • Important to study not only the demand but also
    the supply side of the market (mutual funds,
    mortgage companies etc.)
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