Family, Friends and Framing: A Cross-Country Study of Subjective Survival Expectations

40 Pages Posted: 4 Jan 2016

See all articles by Federica Teppa

Federica Teppa

De Nederlandsche Bank

Susan Thorp

The University of Sydney Business School

Hazel Bateman

UNSW Sydney, CEPAR

Multiple version iconThere are 3 versions of this paper

Date Written: December 23, 2015

Abstract

We implement a two-country online choice experiment on around 2000 respondents per country, first, to investigate the formation of subjective survival expectations; and second, to evaluate the relation between subjective survival expectations and attitudes to pension regulations. Each respondent provided subjective survival probabilities to a range of target ages in either a “live to” or “die by” framing, then subsets of respondents were sorted to conditions where information about current cohort survival, personalized information on same-sex parent or grandparent survival, or both, were provided and the respondent updated their subjective survival expectations. Finally, respondents were asked their views on changes to pension eligibility ages. We find that giving people information about the longevity of peers does not induce them to revise their subjective survival expectations much, and neither does information about the relative longevity of their same-sex parent or grandparent. “Live to” and “die by” framing has a much larger effect on reported subjective expectations than personalized information about cohort or family longevity. However subjective expectations are relevant to explaining opinions on retirement policy and planning. Regulators trying to educate the public about longevity and the consequent need for delayed retirement or pension ages need alternative strategies.

Keywords: Longevity Risk, Framing effect, Survey Data, Hypothetical Choices

JEL Classification: C5, C8, D12, G11

Suggested Citation

Teppa, Federica and Thorp, Susan and Bateman, Hazel, Family, Friends and Framing: A Cross-Country Study of Subjective Survival Expectations (December 23, 2015). De Nederlandsche Bank Working Paper No. 491, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2710670 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2710670

Federica Teppa

De Nederlandsche Bank ( email )

PO Box 98
1000 AB Amsterdam
Amsterdam, 1000 AB
Netherlands

Susan Thorp (Contact Author)

The University of Sydney Business School ( email )

Abercrombie Building
H70
The University Of Sydney, NSW 2006
Australia
0290366354 (Phone)

Hazel Bateman

UNSW Sydney, CEPAR ( email )

High Street
Sydney, NSW 2052
Australia

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
74
Abstract Views
986
Rank
332,714
PlumX Metrics