Who Chooses Defined Contribution Plans?
36 Pages Posted: 20 Jan 2007 Last revised: 5 Aug 2022
Date Written: January 2007
Abstract
This paper provides new evidence on what types of individuals are most likely to choose a defined contribution (DC) plan over a defined benefit (DB) plan. Making use of administrative data from the State Universities Retirement System (SURS) of Illinois, we study the decisions of nearly 50,000 new employees who make a one-time, irrevocable choice between a traditional DB plan, a portable DB plan, and an entirely self-managed DC plan. Because the SURS-covered earnings of these employees are not covered under the Social Security system, their choices provides insight into the DB vs. DC preferences of individuals with regard to a primary source of their retirement income. We find that a majority of participants fail to make an active decision and are thus defaulted into the traditional DB plan after 6 months. We also find that those individuals who are most likely to be financially sophisticated are most likely to choose the self-managed DC plan, despite the fact that, given plan parameters, the DC plan is inferior to the portable DB plan under reasonable assumptions about future financial market returns. We discuss both rational and behavioral reasons that might explain this finding.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Guaranteeing Defined Contribution Pensions: The Option to Buy-Back a Defined Benefit Promise
-
Understanding the Defined Benefit Versus Defined Contribution Choice
-
Mental Accounting in Portfolio Choice: Evidence from a Flypaper Effect
By James J. Choi, David Laibson, ...
-
The Flypaper Effect in Individual Investor Asset Allocation
By James J. Choi, David Laibson, ...
-
Incorporating Employee Heterogeneity into Default Rules for Retirement Plan Selection
-
Incorporating Employee Heterogeneity into Default Rules for Retirement Plan Selection
-
Pension Plan Characteristics and Framing Effects in Employee Savings Behavior
By David Card and Michael R. Ransom
-
Pension Plan Characteristics and Framing Effects in Employee Savings Behavior
By David Card and Michael R. Ransom