Affiliation:
1. Carlos III University of Madrid, Spain
2. National University of Distance Education, Spain
3. Carlos III University of Madrid, Spain & WZB Berlin Social Science Center, Germany
Abstract
A promising approach to pension policy preferences focuses on the influence of policy related information. We advance this research programme by examining the impact of information about future pension benefits, including whether information effects occur through priming, learning or both. Drawing on a novel, split-sample survey experiment in the US, Germany and Spain, we examine the impact of information on forecasted pension replacement rates for 2040 on pension policy attitudes. Findings indicate that the information treatment increases support for the two outcomes considered: (i) increases in the pensionable age and (ii) greater spending on pensions relative to other social programmes. Analyses of heterogeneous treatment effects accounting for prior beliefs of participants show that information effects occur both through priming and learning. The study concludes that hard, non-partisan information increases support for reforms that foster the financial sustainability of pension systems, although the scope of information effects depends on contextual conditions.
Funder
Spanish State Research Agency
Programa de actividades de I + D entre grupos de investigacion de la Comunidad de Madrid en Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,General Social Sciences
Cited by
1 articles.
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