Author:
MacDonald Bonnie-Jeanne,Osberg Lars,Moore Kevin D.
Abstract
AbstractWill 70% of a worker's final annual employment earnings sustain living standards after retirement? Despite increasing skepticism, the most dominant measure of retirement income adequacy by financial planners, pensions plan advisors, academics and public policy makers is the “final employment earnings replacement rate”, where 70% is considered the right target to ensure living standards remain at approximately the same level after retirement. Using Statistics Canada's LifePaths dynamic population micro-simulation model, this paper asks whether those individuals from the 1951–1958 Canadian birth cohort who attain roughly a 70% final employment earnings replacement rate (as conventionally measured) at retirement do, in fact, achieve approximate continuity in their living standards. We find that the conventional final earnings replacement rate measure has little predictive value for living standards continuity between working-life and retirement. The primary reason is that employment earnings in a single year is not a reliable representation of a worker's standard of living — it relies on an inadequate pre-retirement measurement period, does not incorporate important components of consumption sources (such as home equity), and ignores household size (particularly children). As a result, we find that the correlation between the conventional earnings replacement rate and actual living standards continuity is relatively low (0.11). The paper therefore suggests an alternative metric for assessing how well a worker's living standard is maintained after retirement — i.e., the Living Standards Replacement Rate, or the LSRR. The LSRR provides a more accurate, understandable and consistent measure of retirement income adequacy.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Accounting
Reference108 articles.
1. Pickard L. (2008) Informal care for older people provided by their adult children: Projections of supply and demand to 2041 in England, Report to the Strategy Unit (Cabinet Office) and the Department of Health, Discussion Paper 2515, London.
2. Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, OECD. (2009) Private Pensions and the Financial Crisis: How to Ensure Adequate Retirement Income from Defined Contribution Pension Plans? Working Party on Private Pensions.
3. O'Harra J. , Sabelhaus J.E. and Simpson M. (2004) Overview of the congressional budget office long-term (CBOLT) policy simulation model. Congressional Budget Office.
Cited by
11 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献