Evidence on the Relationship between Pension-Driven Financial Incentives and Late-Career Attrition: Implications for Pension Reform

Author:

Goldhaber Dan,Grout CyrusORCID,Holden Kristian L.,McGee Josh B.1

Affiliation:

1. Dan Goldhaber is Director of Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research at the American Institutes for Research and an Affiliate Research Professor and Director of the Center for Education Data and Research at the University of Washington. Cyrus Grout is a Researcher in the Center for Education Data and Research at the University of Washington. Kristian L. Holden is an Economist at Amazon Inc. Josh B. McGee is a Research Assistant Professor and the Associate Director for the Office of Education...

Abstract

Retirement plans can create strong financial incentives that have important labor market implications, and many states have adopted alternative plan designs that significantly change these incentives. The authors use longitudinal data to investigate the impact of Washington State’s 1996 introduction of a hybrid retirement plan on late-career attrition. The unique setup of Washington’s plans allows them to provide empirical evidence on the influence of financial incentives created by statutory retirement eligibility thresholds. Findings show that despite facing very different financial incentives, teachers enrolled in the hybrid and traditional plans respond similarly to reaching a key retirement eligibility threshold. The authors hypothesize that teachers are anchoring to the eligibility thresholds, muting the influence of the financial incentives. They also provide evidence that, in the presence of bright-line eligibility thresholds that can anchor workers’ separation behavior, commonly used structural models may overpredict workers’ responsiveness to the financial incentives embedded in retirement plans.

Funder

National Center for the Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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