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Investment Choice in the Swedish Premium Pension Plan

April 1, 2005
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Working Paper by Annika Sundén, Marten Palme, and Paul Soderlind

Abstract

In 1998, Sweden passed a pension reform that introduced a second tier of mandatory individual accounts, the Premium Pension, in the public system. Of the total contribution rate of 18.5 percent, 2.5 percentage points go to the accounts. The first investment selections in the Premium Pension plan took place in the fall of 2000 when all Swedes born after 1938 were able to choose how to invest their contributions from a menu of about 650 mutual funds. Approximately 70 percent of participants made an “active choice” while the remaining participants’ contributions were invested in a government-run default fund.

This paper examines investment choice in the Swedish individual account scheme. First, do workers with high risk in their human capital diversify their overall portfolio by investing their pension funds in low-risk funds? Second, to what extent do participants exhibit “home bias” and invest their pension funds in Swedish assets?

The results show a positive relationship between income and the level of risk in the portfolio. But, looking into the details, the relationship is actually somewhat U-shaped: low-income investors take on more risk than middle-income earners. It also seems as if women who qualify for the guarantee benefit (low-income earners) take on more risk than motivated by their situation. We also find that workers in the manufacturing sector – that is, the sector that is probably most correlated with the Swedish stock market – are less likely to invest in foreign assets and thus are exhibiting “home bias.”

Senior man working at laptop at home
Senior man working at laptop at home
Author(s)
Headshot of Annika Sundén
Annika Sundén
Headshot of Marten Palme
Marten Palme
Headshot of Paul Soderlind
Paul Soderlind
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Executive Summary
Citation

Sunden, , Marten Palme, and Paul Soderlind. 2005. "Investment Choice in the Swedish Premium Pension Plan" Working Paper 2005-6. Chestnut Hill, MA: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

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Other Project Publications
  • Issue Brief
Associated Project(s)
  • BC04-09
Topics
Social Security
Publication Type
Working Paper
Publication Number
WP#2005-6
Sponsor
U.S. Social Security Administration
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