Differential Mortality and the Value of Individual Account Retirement Annuities

TitleDifferential Mortality and the Value of Individual Account Retirement Annuities
Publication TypeReport
Year of Publication2000
AuthorsBrown, JR
InstitutionNational Bureau of Economic Research, NBER Working Paper 7560
Call Numberwp_2000/JBrown_NBER.pdf
KeywordsIncome, Net Worth and Assets
Abstract

This paper examines the extent of redistribution that would occur under various annuity and bequest options as part of an individual accounts retirement program. I first estimate mortality differentials by gender, race, ethnicity and level of education using the National Longitudinal Mortality Study and document substantial differences. I then use these estimates to examine the expected transfers that would take place between socioeconomic groups under different assumptions about the structure of an annuity program. Using an expected present discounted value or money s worth calculation as the basis for comparison, I find that the size of transfers in an individual accounts program is highly sensitive to the benefit structure. For example, mandating a single-life, real annuity can result in expected transfers of as high as 20 of the account balance, often from economically disadvantaged groups toward groups that are better off. These transfers can be substantially reduced through the use of joint life annuities, survivor provisions and bequest options. For example, the largest expected negative transfer under a joint and full survivor annuity with a fully valued 20-year guarantee option is only 2 of the account balance. However, efforts to reduce the extent of redistribution generally do so at the cost of significantly lower annuity benefits paid to the individuals who contribute to the system.

Notes

RDA; National Institute of Aging and the National Bureau of Economic Research

URLhttp://www.nber.org/papers/
Endnote Keywords

Annuities/redistribution

Endnote ID

8423

Citation Key5423