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What Stock Market Returns to Expect for the Future?

September 3, 1999
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Issue Brief by Peter A. Diamond

Introduction

Over the long term, stocks have earned a higher rate of return than Treasury bonds. Therefore, many recent proposals to reform Social Security include a stock investment component. In evaluating these proposals, the Social Security Administration’s Office of the Actuary (OACT) has generally used a 7.0 percent real return for stocks (based on a long-term historical average) throughout its 75-year projection period. For the return on Treasury bonds, it currently assumes some variation in the initial decade followed by a constant real return of 3.0 percent. Therefore, its current assumption for the equity premium, defined as the difference between yields on equities and Treasuries, is 4.0 percent in the long run. Some critics contend that the projected return on stocks ¾ and the resulting equity premium ¾ used by the OACT are too high…

Time counting down to choose between investment bear and bull stock market concept, hourglass or sandglass on chart and graph, price list report paper surround by bear and bull figure
Time counting down to choose between investment bear and bull stock market concept, hourglass or sandglass on chart and graph, price list report paper surround by bear and bull figure
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Headshot of Peter A. Diamond
Peter A. Diamond
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Citation

Diamond, Peter. 1999. "What Stock Market Returns to Expect for the Future?" Issue in Brief 2. Chestnut Hill, MA: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

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Other Project Publications
  • Working Paper
Associated Project(s)
  • BC99-Q2
Topics
Social Security
Publication Type
Issue Brief
Publication Number
IB#2
Sponsor
U.S. Social Security Administration
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