Means-tested Income Support, Portfolio Choice and Decumulation in Retirement
Survey
HILDA
Author(s)
Date Issued
2009-04
Pages
36
Keywords
Portfolio choice
Retirement wealth
Life-cycle saving
Public pension
Abstract
We investigate the impact of means tested public income transfers on post-retirement
decumulation and portfolio choice using theoretical simulations and panel data on Australian Age Pensioners. Means tested public pension payments in Australia have broad coverage and give insight into the incentive responsiveness of well-o¤, as well as poorer households. Via numerical solutions to a discrete time, nite horizon dynamic programming problem, we simulate the optimal consumption and portfolio allocation strategies for a retired household subject to assets and income tests. Relative to benchmark, means tested households should
optimally decumulate faster early in retirement, and choose more risky portfolios. Panel data tests on inferred wealth for pensioner households show evidence of more rapid spending early
in retirement. However they also show that better-o¤ households continue to accumulate,
even when facing a steeper implicit tax rate on wealth than applies to poorer households.
Wealthier households also hold riskier portfolios. Results from tests for Lorenz dominance of the panel wealth distribution show no decrease in wealth inequality over the ve years of the study.
decumulation and portfolio choice using theoretical simulations and panel data on Australian Age Pensioners. Means tested public pension payments in Australia have broad coverage and give insight into the incentive responsiveness of well-o¤, as well as poorer households. Via numerical solutions to a discrete time, nite horizon dynamic programming problem, we simulate the optimal consumption and portfolio allocation strategies for a retired household subject to assets and income tests. Relative to benchmark, means tested households should
optimally decumulate faster early in retirement, and choose more risky portfolios. Panel data tests on inferred wealth for pensioner households show evidence of more rapid spending early
in retirement. However they also show that better-o¤ households continue to accumulate,
even when facing a steeper implicit tax rate on wealth than applies to poorer households.
Wealthier households also hold riskier portfolios. Results from tests for Lorenz dominance of the panel wealth distribution show no decrease in wealth inequality over the ve years of the study.
External resource (Link)
Type
Reports and technical papers
