Financial Literacy: Implications for Retirement Security and the Financial Marketplace
Olivia S. Mitchell and Annamaria Lusardi
Abstract
As financial markets become increasingly complex and integrated, individuals and their families are increasingly faced with making highly sophisticated and all-too-often irreversible economic decisions. Nowhere is this more evident than with regard to retirement decision-making: a half-century ago, traditional defined benefit pension schemes were the norm in the United States, Japan, Australia and much of Europe, but these have now been largely replaced with defined contribution pensions. In the process, employer and government judgment regarding how much to save and where to invest has been r ... More
As financial markets become increasingly complex and integrated, individuals and their families are increasingly faced with making highly sophisticated and all-too-often irreversible economic decisions. Nowhere is this more evident than with regard to retirement decision-making: a half-century ago, traditional defined benefit pension schemes were the norm in the United States, Japan, Australia and much of Europe, but these have now been largely replaced with defined contribution pensions. In the process, employer and government judgment regarding how much to save and where to invest has been replaced by individuals having to make these choices on their own (perhaps assisted by advisers they also select on their own). Additionally, participants in defined contribution plans must also decide how to spend down their pension assets and determine whether to annuitize or take their benefits in a single lump sum. The trend toward increased individual responsibility and greater financial complexity extends into other realms of life as well, for example regarding decisions over credit cards, adjustable rate mortgages, and when to claim retirement benefits. This volume focuses on key lessons for financial decision-making in the wake of that crisis, exploring how financial literacy can enhance peoples' skills and abilities to make more informed economic choices. Moreover, given the demographic forces at work and the structure of the labor markets, where workers change jobs and employers many times before retiring, the increase in individual responsibility with regard to financial security after retirement will continue to be a feature of many economies around the world.
Keywords:
financial literacy,
retirement,
saving,
financial education,
financial decision-making,
counseling,
behavior
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2011 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780199696819 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2012 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199696819.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Olivia S. Mitchell, Editor
International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans Professor Chair and Professor of Insurance and Risk Management, and Professor of Business and Public Policy Director, Pension Research Council & Boettner Center for Pensions and Retirement Research
Annamaria Lusardi, Editor
Joel Z. and Susan Hyatt Professor of Economics at Dartmouth College and a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research
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