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Annuity Markets and Retirement Security

by James M. Poterba

WP#2001-10  

Abstract

This paper describes the role of adverse selection in annuity markets, and sketches some of the public policy implications of the existence of such selection effects. It shows that a substantial fraction of the difference between the expected value of the payouts on both voluntary and compulsory annuity products in the U.K., and the premium cost of those products, is attributable to adverse selection. This is simply the fact that the individuals who currently choose to purchase annuities are on average longer-lived than randomly-selected individuals in the U.K. population. Adverse selection is most pronounced in the voluntary annuity market, but there is also some evidence of selection in the compulsory market, where individuals can choose which type of annuity to purchase and how much of their defined contribution balance to annuitize.

Requiring all persons to annuitize their retirement account balances at a specified age is one way to substantially reduce the degree of adverse selection in the annuity market. More generally, however, any policy that encourages a large fraction of the population to participate in the annuity market is likely to have a similar effect. Doyle, Mitchell, and Piggott (2001) compare the annuity markets in Australia and Singapore, and they find a greater degree of adverse selection in the former than the latter. They attribute this difference to the relatively generous government old-age safety net in Australia, which reduces the fraction of households that find it attractive to purchase private annuities.

Whether government policy should compel participants in defined contribution retirement saving programs to annuitize all or part of their accumulated balance, and whether there should be restrictions on the set of annuity policies that individuals can purchase, is an important and controversial policy issue. There are key tradeoffs associated with any policy choice. Compelling annuity purchase reduces the chance that some elderly households will outlive their resources, and it reduces the degree of adverse selection in the annuity market. Compulsion may also limit the choices available to retirees, and force some retirees to purchase annuity products that are substantially different than the products they would choose in an unconstrained market. Developing models that can evaluate the welfare costs of adverse selection and of limiting consumer choice in a world with heterogeneous consumer preferences should be a central goal for future work.

For full paper in PDF

James M. Poterba is the Mitsui Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  Professor Poterba is also a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and the Director of the NBER's Public Economics Research Program. The research reported herein was supported in part by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College pursuant to a grant from the U.S. Social Security Administration (SSA) funded as part of the Retirement Research Consortium. The opinions and conclusions are solely those of the author and should not be construed as representing the opinions or policy of SSA or any agency of the federal government or of the CRR. I am grateful to Jeff Brown and Michael Orszag for helpful discussions, especially to Amy Finkelstein for many helpful discussions and for outstanding research assistance, and to the Hoover Institution and National Science Foundation for additional research support. This paper is based upon a lecture delivered at the Institute for Fiscal Studies in July 2000.
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