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YOLO: Mortality Beliefs and Household Finance Puzzles

Author

Listed:
  • Raphael Schoenle

    (Brandeis University)

  • Kristian Ove Myrseth

    (University of St. Andrews)

  • Rawley Heimer

    (Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland)

Abstract
Subjective mortality beliefs affect pre- and post-retirement consumption and savings decisions, as well as portfolio allocation. Our new survey evidence shows that younger individuals overestimate their mortality at short horizons while older individuals over-estimate their long-run chances of survival. The formation of these beliefs across age cohorts can be attributed to overweighting the most salient causes-of-death, which change over the life-cycle. This bias matters empirically: Survival expectations correlate with heterogeneity in ï¬ nancial education and investment behavior. These beliefs make the young (old) more impatient (patient), and when embedded in a conventional dynamic life-cycle model with pre-cautionary savings, they cause the young to under-save (they have 10% less saved upon retirement) and retirees to not fully draw down their assets (they consume 12% less during retirement). In addition, we propose a few mechanisms through which mortality beliefs could affect the equity premium, particularly through a reduction in the risk free rate.

Suggested Citation

  • Raphael Schoenle & Kristian Ove Myrseth & Rawley Heimer, 2016. "YOLO: Mortality Beliefs and Household Finance Puzzles," 2016 Meeting Papers 661, Society for Economic Dynamics.
  • Handle: RePEc:red:sed016:661
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    References listed on IDEAS

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