Choice in Pensions: Insights from the Swedish Premium Pension System

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Choice in Pensions: Insights from the Swedish Premium Pension System Associate Professor Marketing Maastricht University Master student Maastricht University October 13, 2017

Choice in Pensions?

Choice in Pensions the New Black?

Research question

Research question We analyse people s perception of the Premium Pension System, with respect to 5 interrelated constructs: Choice overload Subjective knowledge Fund choice & branding paradox Risk aversion Expected financial well-being

Swedish Premium Pension

Swedish Premium Pension System 2.5% of taxable income is saved in the Premium Pension System ~ 900 funds to choose from First investment selections in fall 2000 select up to 5 funds stay with default fund

Previous Research

Previous research Czech (2016) Choice Overload and the Public Policy Design. The Case of Swedish Pension System

Swedish survey

Swedish Premium Pension Data RESPONDENTS Total questionnaire links send out: 14,093 Questionnaire links opened: 26.5% Valid respondents: 3001 Valid response rate: 21.3% Age: 25 65 53.8% male; 46.2% female NON-RESPONSES Dropouts: 268 Refusal: 8 Respondents after quota was full: 461 Non-response rate: 5.2%

Perceived knowledge

Perceived knowledge Age group 25-34 years 81% young Swedes feel unknowledgeable about the premium pension (categories 1-3) 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 not at all knowlegeable 2 3 4 5 6 very knowledgeable

Perceived knowledge All age groups: 25-65 years 68% of respondents feel unknowledgeable about the premium pension (categories 1-3) 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 not at all knowlegeable 2 3 4 5 6 very knowledgeable

Appreciation vs. Actual Behaviour

Choice Appreciation Younger people appreciate choice significantly more than older people 60 50 40 30 20 Appreciate choice State should handle it Don't know 10 0 25-34 35-44 45-54 55+

Actual Choice Behaviour but 57% of the young did not choose a fund 80 70 60 50 40 30 Made a choice No choice Don't know 20 10 0 25-34 35-44 45-54 55+

Fund Selection Behaviour

Fund selection 64% selected a fund 4 out of 10 could not remember how many funds they chose Those that could remember selected on average 3 funds

Respondents who chose a fund: have a higher perceived knowledge are more optimistic about their future financial well-being have higher risk preferences appreciate choice more than people who did not chose a fund for their premium pension Make a choice No choice Subjective Knowledge Expec. financial well-being Financial risk preferences Choice appreciation

Respondents who chose a fund: have significantly higher incomes have significantly higher private savings are significantly older than people who did not chose a fund for their premium pension Make a choice No choice Income Pension savings Age

Choice trigger

Choice trigger The three most important Orange envelope Financial advisor Family, friends + colleagues

People who were actively influenced

Respondents who are influenced by the opinions of others when choosing a fund: have significantly lower subjective knowledge perceive significantly more choice overload are more likely to be female than people who are not influenced by others when choosing a fund for their premium pension influenced not influenced Subjective Knowledge Choice overload gender

What people know about their fund(s)

Most know fund administrator, but have less knowledge on chosen fund or type of fund Many seem insecure and remember only partly 19% of people have an index fund, 49% don t know 60 Yes 50 Don't know Yes 40 30 Yes No Partly No Partly No No 20 Partly Yes 10 0 Which funds? Which type of funds? Which fund provider? Index fund?

What fund characteristics people look for

Expected yield and fund costs most important, followed by level of risk and type of fund 66% find yield history very or rather important past returns do not predict future returns and should therefore not influence fund choices

Expected financial well-being

People who feel optimistic about their financial well-being at retirement have a higher appreciation for choice than people who feel pessimistic Selecting a fund does NOT affect people s expectations about their future well-being! Optimists Pessimists choice appreciation fund selection *** optimists show higher levels of perceived knowledge *** optimists are more likely to be female, younger, have at least a college or university degree and higher income levels

Pension responsibility - state vs. own responsibility -

State vs. own responsibility Respondents believe to a greater extent that it is their own responsibility to save money Yet, 2 in 5 do not appreciate choice, while 1 in 5 has no opinion

Data implications

Data implications Increases expectations of financial wellbeing No effect on financial wellbeing Choice appreciation Fund selection

Data implications Swedes with low perceived knowledge Swedes with low risk preferences Swedes who face choice overload opt more often for the default are more likely to be influenced in their decision feel less informed about their choice(s) feel more pessimistic about their future wellbeing opt more often for the default opt more often for the default are more likely to be influenced in their decision feel less informed about their choice(s)

The 7 steps in designing a good choice environment 1. Determine goal (Choice? Default?) 2. Determine design of alternatives (# of attributes, aligned, ordered) 3. Determine design of choice set (# of alternatives, categorization) 4. Presentation of choice set (Sequentially? Alternative or attribute? Default?) 5. Influencers on decision making (Framing, priming, fluency) 6. Test choice environment (focus groups, interviews, surveys, experiments) 7. Adjust choice architecture if needed Share insights! Brüggen et al. (2017) Creating Good Choice Environments: Insights from research and industry practice, Netspar

Monika Böhnke Lisa Brüggen m.bohnke@student.maastrichtuniversity.nl e.bruggen@maastrichtuniversity.nl Lisa Bruggen Elisabeth (Lisa) Brüggen

Questions & Answers Expected retirement age Expected financial well-being (-more on this topic-) Expected sources of income Fund Selection Behaviour (-more on this topic-) Fund Switching Behaviour Choice trigger (-more on this topic-) Contacts that actively influenced people in their decision How informed people felt Pension responsibility (-more on this topic-)

Expected retirement age

Expected retirement age 92% of respondents can envision at what age they will retire 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Retire at Don't know Q&A

Expected retirement age 46% of respondents believe that they will be 66 or older when they retire some indicated that they will never retire before they die 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 <= 63 64-65 66-67 68-70 71+ Q&A

Expected retirement age Respondents with lower incomes expect to retire later Q&A

Expected financial well-being - more on this topic -

Expected financial well-being 27% believe that their future financial well-being is neither good nor bad 27% are more optimistic 46% are more pessimistic 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Very bad 2 3 4 5 6 Very good Q&A

People who feel optimistic about their financial well-being at retirement Feel less concerned and more confident Show higher levels of perceived knowledge Appreciate to make fund choices themselves Are more likely to be female, younger, have at least a college or university degree and higher income levels Selecting investment fund(s) did not have a significant effect: those that selected a fund did not feel better off Optimists Pessimists concerned confident subjective knowledge choice appreciation met an advisor in the last 12 months high income academics age Q&A

Expected sources of income

Expected sources of income People expect 52% to come from the state pension Q&A

Fund Selection Behaviour - more on this topic -

Fund selection 64% indicated to have selected a fund at any time in the past 27% did never select a fund and stayed with the default option AP7 Såfa 9% could not remember if they ever selected a fund 70 65 60 55 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Yes No Don't remember / Don't know Q&A

Fund selection 38% don t know how many funds they own For the ones who remember, the most common number of funds is 3 40 30 20 10 0 1 2 3 4 5 Don't remember / Don't know Q&A

Fund Switching Behaviour

Changing funds 25% never change funds (after their first choice away from AP7 Såfa) 21% change funds every 3-5 years 8% change funds several times per year Q&A

Choice trigger - more on this topic -

The three most important triggers for the last fund change are: Orange envelope financial advisor family, friends, colleagues Respondents could have chosen more than one option. Q&A

Choice trigger Active approaches (e.g. financial advisors, reassigning loans, tele-marketing) are strong triggers for the last fund change (31%) Passive approaches can accompany active approaches (e.g. education, financial news, advertisement, friends, family, colleagues) 16% don t know what triggered them 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Orange envelope Active approaches Passive approaches Other Don't know Q&A

Contacts that actively influenced people in their decisions

External influences Most important influencers are bank contacts, pension advisors and family members Q&A

External influences The professional network is a stronger influencer than the personal network 60 50 40 30 Bank contact Pension advisor Employer 20 10 Family Friend Colleague Teacher / professor Trade union 0 Professional network Personal network Q&A

How informed people felt

How informed people felt when they selected investment fund(s) Only 13% of respondents felt particularly well-informed (categories 8-10) 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 Not at all 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 To a very great extend Q&A

People who feel better informed about their fund choice Show higher levels of perceived knowledge & financial literacy Perceive less choice overload Are more likely to be male, younger, have at least a college or university degree and lower income levels Yes No Subjective Knowledge Choice overload Financial literacy gender age academics income Q&A

Pension responsibility - more on this topic -

State vs. own responsibility There is a significant difference in the respondent s perception as to which extent the state or the Swede himself/herself is responsible for a reasonable pension: On average people do not believe that the state will take full care of their pension and see themselves responsible to some extent Yet, 40.1% do not appreciate to choose their own funds, while 14.9% are insecure if making own choices is a good thing Q&A