TY - JOUR
T1 - The macroeconomic stabilisation effects of social security and 401(K) plans
AU - Ghilarducci, Teresa
AU - Saad-lessler, Joelle
AU - Fisher, Eloy
PY - 2012/1/1
Y1 - 2012/1/1
N2 - This paper investigates how various retirement institutions impact the macroeconomy. We find that for every 1 percentage point increase in the output gap, net flows of various government programmes including Social Security decrease by 0.34 percentage points, while net flows of 401(k) plans increase by 0.05 percentage points. In levels, for every $1 increase in real gross domestic product, net flows from various government programmes shrink by 45 cents, whereas net flows from 401(k) plans increase by 4.6 cents. In other words, 401(k) plans reduce the automatic stabilisation impact of government programmes by 10%-15%. Moreover, we find that Social Security has a net negative effect on household consumption, while 401(k) retirement accounts work the opposite way. In fact the destabilising effect of 401(k) plans on consumption is twice as strong as the one attributed to Social Security. These results highlight a significant problem with 401(k) retirement plans and any retirement plan that is dependent on financial markets.
AB - This paper investigates how various retirement institutions impact the macroeconomy. We find that for every 1 percentage point increase in the output gap, net flows of various government programmes including Social Security decrease by 0.34 percentage points, while net flows of 401(k) plans increase by 0.05 percentage points. In levels, for every $1 increase in real gross domestic product, net flows from various government programmes shrink by 45 cents, whereas net flows from 401(k) plans increase by 4.6 cents. In other words, 401(k) plans reduce the automatic stabilisation impact of government programmes by 10%-15%. Moreover, we find that Social Security has a net negative effect on household consumption, while 401(k) retirement accounts work the opposite way. In fact the destabilising effect of 401(k) plans on consumption is twice as strong as the one attributed to Social Security. These results highlight a significant problem with 401(k) retirement plans and any retirement plan that is dependent on financial markets.
KW - Austerity measures
KW - Automatic stabilisation
KW - Macroeconomics of social security
KW - Retirement programmes
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U2 - 10.1093/cje/ber040
DO - 10.1093/cje/ber040
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84855887550
SN - 0309-166X
VL - 36
SP - 237
EP - 251
JO - Cambridge Journal of Economics
JF - Cambridge Journal of Economics
IS - 1
ER -