%0 Report %D 2012 %T Personality Traits and Economic Preparation for Retirement %A Michael D Hurd %A Angela Lee Duckworth %A Susann Rohwedder %A David R Weir %K Consumption and Savings %K Health Conditions and Status %K Net Worth and Assets %K Retirement Planning and Satisfaction %X This paper assesses the effects of personality traits on economic preparation for retirement, wealth accumulation, and consumption, among persons 66 to 69 years of age. Among the five chief personality traits of neuroticism, extroversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, and openness, we focus most on conscientiousness. We find levels of adequate economic preparation for retirement ranging from 29 percent to 90 percent and that conscientiousness positively affects the proportion of persons adequately prepared for retirement, while neuroticism negatively affects it. Both consumption and wealth increase with conscientiousness but wealth increases faster, indicating that more conscientious persons save more out of retirement resources. %B MRDRC Working Paper %I Michigan Retirement and Disability Research Center, University of Michigan %C Ann Arbor, MI %G eng %U https://ideas.repec.org/p/mrr/papers/wp279.html %4 personality traits/Conscientiousness/Conscientiousness/retirement planning/wealth Accumulation/consumption/wealth %$ 69838 %0 Report %D 2011 %T Personality and Response to the Financial Crisis %A Angela Lee Duckworth %A David R Weir %K Health Conditions and Status %K Net Worth and Assets %K Public Policy %X In a previous study, we found the family of personality traits known as conscientiousness to be associated in cross-sectional analyses with both lifetime earnings and wealth. In this study, we used data from an Internet survey of HRS respondents in the second quarter of 2009 to test whether conscientiousness and other Big Five factors prospectively predicted responses to the financial crisis of 2008/09. In addition, to improve the targeting and design of behavioral interventions for at-risk individuals, we examined two specific facets of conscientiousness (i.e., self-control and perseverance) that may be more highly related to these economic outcomes than other facets. Finally, we used data from the Consumption and Activities Mail Survey (CAMS) to examine whether personality is related to the proportion of income saved vs. spent. Missing data precluded sufficiently powerful prospective analyses of personality and responses to the financial crisis. Likewise, data on self-control and perseverance from the 2010 experimental module were not sufficient at the time of final reporting to come to definitive conclusions about how these facets relate to economic outcomes. We did find that conscientious adults save more and spend less of their incomes, whereas adults who are higher in openness to experience (e.g., adventurous, sophisticated) save less and spend more of their income. The robust associations between conscientiousness and economic outcomes suggests further investigation of interventions that improve conscientiousness as well as policies that specifically target less conscientious individuals (e.g., default choices for retirement savings). %B Michigan Retirement and Disability Research Center Working Paper %I The University of Michigan %C Ann Arbor, MI %G eng %U https://mrdrc.isr.umich.edu/projects/personality-and-response-to-the-financial-crisis/ %4 wealth/lifetime earnings/lifetime earnings/conscientiousness/conscientiousness/great Recession %$ 62852