Do Households Increase Their Savings When the Kids Leave Home?

TitleDo Households Increase Their Savings When the Kids Leave Home?
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsDushi, I, Munnell, AH, Sanzenbacher, GT, Webb, A, Chen, A
JournalThe Journal of Retirement
Volume9
Issue2
Pagination21-35
Keywordschildren, consumption, Households, Savings
Abstract

Much of the disagreement over whether households are adequately prepared for retirement reflects differences in assumptions regarding the extent to which consumption declines when the kids leave home. If consumption declines substantially when the kids leave home, as some life-cycle models of retirement saving assume, households need to achieve lower replacement rates in retirement and need to accumulate less wealth. Using administrative tax data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), as well as the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP), this article investigates whether household consumption declines when kids leave the home and, if so, by how much. Because consumption data are noisy and savings is the flip side of consumption, this article examines whether savings in 401(k) plans increase when the kids leave home. The article also investigates alternative methods of saving, including non-401(k) savings and increased mortgage payments.

DOI10.3905/jor.2021.1.091
Citation Key12032