Framing and Retirement Age: The Gap between Willingness-to-Accept and Willingness-to-Pay
Economic Policy, Vol. 32(92), pp. 757-809, 2017, DOI: org/10.1093/epolic/eix014
64th Panel Meeting of Economic Policy, October 2016
69 Pages Posted: 9 Apr 2014 Last revised: 29 Oct 2017
Date Written: August 25, 2016
Abstract
In a large online experiment, we relate the retirement timing decision to the disparity between the willingness-to-accept (WTA) and the willingness-to-pay (WTP). In the WTP treatment, participants indicate the maximum amount of monthly benefits they are willing to give up in order to retire early. In the WTA treatment, the minimum increase of monthly payments in order to delay retirement is elicited. Our results reveal that the framing of the decision problem strongly influences participants' reservation price for early retirement. The willingness-to-accept for early retirement is more than twice as high as the corresponding willingness-to-pay. Using actual values from the German social security system as market prices, we demonstrate that the presentation in a WTA frame can induce early retirement. In this frame, the implicit probability of retiring early increases by 30 percentage points.We further show that the disparity between WTA and WTP is correlated with loss aversion. Repeating the analysis with data from a representative household survey (German SAVE panel), we find similar results.
Keywords: Retirement Decision, Willigness-to-pay, Willigness-to-accept, Social Security
JEL Classification: D03, D14, H55, J26
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation