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Now considered by The Pensions Regulator with respect to trustee codes of practice ... Male undergraduates do discount the future (strongly) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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1
  • Pension Fund Trustee Competence
  • By Gordon L Clark,
  • Emiko Caerlewy-Smith,
  • and John C Marshall
  • Sponsored by the NAPF
  • University of Oxford
  • July 2005

2
1. Introduction
  • Anglo-American pension funds are envied by
    continental Europe
  • Crucial to many peoples total retirement income
  • Trustees are crucial to pension institutions
  • Subject to fiduciary duty as well as related
    statutory requirements.

3
2. Trustee competence
  • Emphasised in the UK Myners Report
  • Questioned by industry analysts re. innovation
  • Now considered by The Pensions Regulator with
    respect to trustee codes of practice
  • This project is about the nature and scope of
    trustee decision-making (in conjunction with the
    NAPF).

1
4
3. Summary of the project
  • Beginning with the education and experience of
    trustees (based on participation in training
    programmes)
  • We also assess trustee competence focusing upon
    problems relevant to investment
  • Drawing implications for fund governance
  • And the relationships of trustees with advisors,
    service providers.

2
5
4. Steps in the project
  • Surveys of trustees at NAPF training programmes
  • Socio-demographic profiles and attitudes re.
    governance procedures
  • Including reference to trustee "knowledge and
    understanding (cf. Myners principles etc)
  • With the focus on empirically evaluating and
    measuring trustee competence.

3
6
5. Problem-solving abilities
  • Design and execution of problem sets relevant to
    investment decision-making
  • Enrolling about 40 trustees, 80 undergraduates
  • Two sets of problems, each taking about 1 hour to
    complete (together or separately)
  • Drawn from a relatively small group of DB pension
    funds, and Oxford undergraduates.

4
7
6. Problem qualities
  • Not intelligence tests (eg. IQ tests etc)
  • Not categorical tests - rational v irrational
  • Level of education not crucial (although this is
    subject to specific training in finance etc.)
  • Basically tests of comprehension and cognition,
    with reference to logic and numerical inference
    in the context of responsibilities.

5
8
7. Methodological Issues
  • Problems with recruiting trustees and
    undergraduates
  • Limited options for discrimination by
    socio-economic status and education
  • Gaps between the problems and the real world
  • Expectations of psychology v. the social sciences
    on issues such as representativeness.

9
8. Findings - discounting the future
  • Some trustees discount the future, some don't,
    and some are inconsistent over time
  • There is a wide range of discount functions only
    some of which appear exponential
  • Male undergraduates do discount the future
    (strongly)
  • Results are consistent with the psychology
    literature (re. weakness of will etc.).

6
10
9. Findings - my money, your money
  • Trustees (as individuals) willingly accept
    moderate risk if asked their attitudes
    (although this varies)
  • Trustees are risk-averse regarding others money
    when required to calibrate options
  • Undergraduates are more risk tolerant (esp.
    males)
  • Consistent (somewhat) with psychological evidence
    although there is little in the experimental
    literature on the effect of commitment to
    otherson risk-taking.

7
11
10. Trustees attitudes to risk

12
11. Trustees risk calibration
13
12. Undergraduates risk calibration
14
13. Findings - probabilistic reasoning
  • Neither trustees nor undergraduates are good at
    probabilistic reasoning
  • Often unable to recognise or link together the
    elements necessary to assess probability (in a
    Bayesian sense)
  • As well, surprising variation in the methods
    used to assess probability
  • Consistent with the psychology literature, even
    if probabilities are often involved in discussion
    of investment strategies.

8
15
14. Findings - information processing
  • Trustees and undergraduates are inefficient users
    of information
  • Undergraduates often use too much information
  • Trustees, sometimes, use too little information
  • Rules can make a substantial difference to the
    use of information and attaining correct
    solutions (consistent with the psychology
    literature).

9
16
15. Conclusions I
  • Should we rely on older men rather than Oxford
    undergraduates to be trustees?
  • Many of the trustees sampled have poor
    problem-solving skills relevant to investment
    issues
  • Worse, the range of trustee solutions may be
    wide AND rarely correct
  • Most trustees are unable to deal with
    probabilities, and most are inefficient
    information processors.

10
17
16. Conclusions II
  • Qualifications to findings would include the
    sample size, the nature of problems etc.
  • Reasonable concern over the formality of testing
    v. real world settings
  • In any event, recent research suggests that
    short-cuts dominate decision-making procedures
  • With little regard to how collectivity makes a
    difference.

18
17. Implications I
  • Boards carry a diversity of trustee competence
  • With important differences in the skills
    appropriate to investment fundamentals
  • With profound differences of approach to the
    solving of problems.
  • Suggesting the possibility of considerable
    disagreement (or silence on basic issues of
    disagreement).

11
19
18. Implications II
  • Fund governance could be important in this
    context
  • Leadership and structured decision-making crucial
    in managing ignorance, confusion, and
    disagreement
  • Otherwise, there will be high levels of (caution)
    risk aversion (or worse), seeking refuge in
    expert advice, rules and procedures
  • With low levels of innovation and slow adaptation
    to changing circumstances.

12
20
19. Implications III
  • Can trustee codes of practice make a difference?
  • Yes, for basic procedures but no, considering
    the importance of expertise
  • Implying the possibility of deference to experts
  • And reliance upon advisers to articulate and
    implement coherent investment strategies (in the
    absence of knowledge and understanding).

13
21
20. Future research
  • Can organisational structure and coherent board
    decision-making procedures overcome the
    heterogeneity of trustee competence?
  • Is the representative model of the UK pension
    trustee system consistent with high-quality,
    efficient decision-making?
  • Is the trust institution appropriate for the
    governance of 21st century pension funds given
    the need for financial innovation?
  • Has the trust institution come to the end of its
    usefulness?

14
22
21. Further reading
  • Clark, G.L. 2000. Pension Fund Capitalism.
    Oxford Oxford University Press
  • Clark, G.L. 2004. Pension fund governance
    expertise and organizational form. Journal of
    Pension Economics and Finance. 3 233-53
  • Lerner, J. et al. 2005. Smart institutions,
    foolish choices? WP11136. Cambridge MA National
    Bureau of Economic Research
  • Merton, R.S. and Z. Bodie 2004. The design of
    financial systems towards a synthesis of
    function and structure. WP 10620. Cambridge MA
    National Bureau of Economic Research.
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