Philip Armour Cornell University
Michigan Retirement Research Center Research Paper No. 2017-373
Abstract:
This paper examines how the 2014 reintroduction of the Social Security statement, staggered by every fifth birth year, affected American Life Panel respondents’ Social Security expectations, savings behavior, and labor supply. The rich panel design of the ALP allows for controls for prior Social Security knowledge and behavior, and a specialized module fielded to ALP respondents elicited recall of the Statement and use of alternate information. The majority of individuals who were sent a Statement recall receiving one, with high rates of nonrecall concentrated among younger respondents. Statement recipients and my Social Security account holders highly value the information therein for retirement planning. Recipients measurably increased their likelihood of expecting future benefits, especially disability benefits, and were less pessimistic about future cuts to the program. Recipients were more likely to work after receipt, especially younger workers, although those already working more than 40 hours per week decreased their hours worked on the intensive margin. There were no statistically significant effects on retirement savings, although additional research is required for estimating heterogeneous effects.
2 comments:
If a link is not accessible to the public to view and the premise behind it is hidden from view, then why post the link?
The link provided routes through the AEI server, which is why it's not accessible. The paper is available to the public via SSRN and also the University of Michigan -- here's the link to the paper on the UM site:
https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/handle/2027.42/142369
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